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Technical Paper

Residual Stresses in Cup Drawing of Automotive Alloys

2002-07-09
2002-01-2135
Residual stresses in metals are caused by a number of processes such as inhomogeneous deformation, phase changes and temperature gradients. This investigation focuses on the residual stresses caused by plastic deformation of automotive metals. Such stresses are responsible for part springback and shape distortion in many manufacturing and assembly processes. Tensile residual stresses may lead to stress cracking and, in some alloys, to stress corrosion cracking which may ultimately lead to premature product failure. The residual stress potential of metals can be evaluated by using the Split Ring Test Method. The test can be used to evaluate the effect of materials on residual stresses in cup drawing. Drawn cups are used because they produce large amounts of residual stresses and, therefore, increase measurement accuracy and reduce experimental error. A closed form analytical solution is used to estimate residual stresses in split rings taken from sections cut from the drawn cups.
Technical Paper

A Benchmark Test for Springback Simulation in Sheet Metal Forming

2000-10-03
2000-01-2657
Springback is a serious problem in sheet metal stamping. It measures the difference between the final shape of the part and the shape of the forming die. Sheet metal forming simulation has made significant progress in predicting springback and several computer simulation codes are commercially available to predict and compensate for it in tool design. The accurate prediction of springback is important and there is a need to validate and verify those predictions with experimental results. Current validation techniques lack standardized procedures, require measurement fixtures that may impose unrealistic restraint on the part, require profiling equipment such as CMM or laser scanning and for the most part produce small springback which reduces measurement accuracy and increases experimental error. A benchmark test has been developed which addresses all these concerns and compares springback predictions by various numerical simulation codes with each other and with experimental results.
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