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Technical Paper

Calibration and Validation of GISSMO Damage Model for A 780-MPa Third Generation Advanced High Strength Steel

2020-04-14
2020-01-0198
To evaluate vehicle crash performance in the early design stages, a reliable fracture model is needed in crash simulations to predict material fracture initiation and propagation. In this paper, a generalized incremental stress state dependent damage model (GISSMO) in LS-DYNA® was calibrated and validated for a 780-MPa third generation advanced high strength steels (AHSS), namely 780 XG3TM steel that combines high strength and ductility. The fracture locus of the 780 XG3TM steel was experimentally characterized under various stress states including uniaxial tension, shear, plane strain and equi-biaxial stretch conditions. A process to calibrate the parameters in the GISSMO model was developed and successfully applied to the 780 XG3TM steel using the fracture test data for these stress states.
Technical Paper

The Prestrain Effect on the Sheared Edge Flangeability of Dual Phase 780 Steels

2012-04-16
2012-01-0533
Edge flanging represents one of the forming modes employed in multistage forming, and advanced high strength steels (AHSS) are more prone to edge cracking during sheared edge flanging than the conventional high strength steels (HSS) and mild steels. The performance of the sheared edge in flanging operation depends on the remaining ductility of the material in the sheared edge after the work hardening (WH) and damage produced by blanking and subsequent forming operations. Therefore, it is important to analyze the effect of work hardening produced by blanking and subsequent forming operations prior to edge flanging on the edge flanging performance. In this study, the effect of different forming operation sequences prior to edge flanging on the edge flanging performance was analyzed for a dual phase 780 steel.
Technical Paper

Three-Point Bending Crash Performance of Advanced High Strength Steels

2009-04-20
2009-01-0797
Drop tower crash tests in a three-point bending configuration were carried out on spot welded box sections, adhesive bonded box sections, and laser welded cylindrical tubes made from a variety of advanced high strength steels. In the tests, a 147-kg indenter with a 28-cm diameter impacts the specimen at approximately 6 m/s, and the bending loads and energy absorption are determined. The results show that the maximum bending loads best correlate to the product of yield strength and thickness-squared, while the energy absorbed over 10-cm displacement best correlates to ultimate tensile strength times thickness-squared. As such, higher strength steels can be used to improve crash performance without increasing weight or to maintain crash performance with weight reduction. Other significant findings of the study are as follows. Bake hardening alone may improve bending crash performance slightly, while cold rolling and baking does not.
Technical Paper

Fatigue of Advanced High Strength Steel Spot-Welds

2006-04-03
2006-01-0978
Because of increasing fuel costs and environmental concerns, the automotive industry is under enormous pressure to reduce vehicle weight. One strategy, downgaging, substitutes a reduced gage (thickness) steel in place of a thicker one, and is usually accompanied by a material grade change to a higher strength steel. Thus, Advanced High Strength Steels (AHSS) are increasingly used for lightweight automotive body structures. The critical durability concern with steels is the spot welds used to join them, since fatigue cracks in body structures preferentially initiate at spot welds. Hence, the Auto/Steel Partnership (A/SP) Sheet Steel Fatigue Taskforce undertook an investigation both to study the fatigue performance of AHSS spot welds, and to generate data for OEM durability analysis. The study included seven AHSS grades and, for comparison, mild steels and a conventional High Strength Low Alloy grade, HSLA340.
Technical Paper

Axial Crash Testing of Advanced High Strength Steel Tubes

2005-04-11
2005-01-0836
Axial drop tower crash tests were carried out on a variety of 70-mm outer-diameter continuous-welded cylindrical steel tubes with several thicknesses (t). Ultimate tensile strength (UTS) ranged from less than 300 MPa for a fully stabilized steel to greater than 800 MPa for the advanced high strength steels (AHSS). In the tests, a 520-kg weight is dropped from a height of 3.3 meters to achieve impact velocities of 6.1 to 6.7 m/s (14 to 15 mph). Load and acceleration data are recorded as a function of time as the tube is crushed axially. The results show that, for a given impact condition, the peak and average crush loads of a steel tube is directly proportional to UTS × t2, while axial crush distance is inversely proportional to UTS × t2. As such, crash deformation can be reduced by substituting higher strength steels of the same thickness, or existing crash deformation can be maintained and weight reduction achieved by substituting higher strength steels with reduced thickness.
Technical Paper

Effects of Strain Rate and Temperature on the Work Hardening Behavior of High Strength Sheet Steels

2003-03-03
2003-01-0516
The influence of strain rate on work hardening behavior has been determined for a variety of high strength steels including high-strength low-alloy (HSLA), dual phase (DP), and transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) steels. Tensile testing was performed at true strain rates of 10-3 s-1 and 1.0 s-1 to represent laboratory testing conditions and dynamic press-forming operations, respectively. Work hardening behavior is described by the conventional strain hardening exponent (n-value), the work hardening rate (dσ/dε), and the Shape-Tilt-Strength (STS) equation as an alternative approach. The effects of deformation temperature and temperature rise during deformation (adiabatic heating) on work hardening are also evaluated. Increasing the strain rate generally increases the work hardening rate at smaller strains, which may contribute to a broader initial strain distribution in press forming.
Technical Paper

Formability and Performance of Steel-Plastic-Steel Laminated Sheet Materials

2001-03-05
2001-01-0079
Steel-plastic-steel (SPS) laminated sheet materials can be utilized in certain automotive applications to achieve significant weight savings over “conventional” sheet steels. Three SPS laminates were produced using various combinations of light gage steel skins and polypropylene cores. Compared to homogeneous steels, density reductions of 35 to 46 percent were achieved. Benefiting from the ductility of their steel skins, SPS laminates can posses adequate formability for typical automotive sheet applications. Furthermore, the forming limit curves can be predicted using the work hardening exponent and thickness of the composite laminate. In three-point bending, the elastic stiffness of SPS laminates is nearly equivalent to that of monolithic steels of the same thickness. Thus, weight reductions similar to those of aluminum alloys can be achieved utilizing laminates in stiffness-critical applications.
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