Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 5 of 5
Technical Paper

Material Characterization of Strain Rate Dependent Elastomers using Simplified Rubber Material Model in LS-DYNA

2022-10-05
2022-28-0379
Elastomers are widely used in many automotive components such as seals, gaskets etc., for their hyperelastic properties. They can undergo large strain and can return to their original state with no significant deformation making them suitable for energy dissipation applications. Most common testing procedures include uniaxial tension, pure shear, biaxial tension and volumetric compression under quasi-static loading conditions. The results from these tests are used to generate material models for different finite element (FE) solvers, such as LS-DYNA. Commonly used material models for elastomers in LS-DYNA are the Ogden Material Model (MAT77), which uses parameter-based approach and the Simplified Rubber Material Model (MAT181), which uses tabulated input data. Prediction of rate dependent behavior of elastomers is gaining interest as, for example, during a crash simulation the components undergo impact under different strain rates.
Technical Paper

Integrated Computational Materials Engineering (ICME) Multi-Scale Model Development for Advanced High Strength Steels

2017-03-28
2017-01-0226
This paper presents development of a multi-scale material model for a 980 MPa grade transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) steel, subject to a two-step quenching and partitioning heat treatment (QP980), based on integrated computational materials engineering principles (ICME Model). The model combines micro-scale material properties defined by the crystal plasticity theory with the macro-scale mechanical properties, such as flow curves under different loading paths. For an initial microstructure the flow curves of each of the constituent phases (ferrite, austenite, martensite) are computed based on the crystal plasticity theory and the crystal orientation distribution function. Phase properties are then used as an input to a state variable model that computes macro-scale flow curves while accounting for hardening caused by austenite transformation into martensite under different straining paths.
Journal Article

Experimental Evaluation of True Stress-Strain for Ductile Thermoplastics

2021-04-06
2021-01-0312
Thermoplastics find application in many automotive components. Off late, hardware testing is supplemented by analysis using finite element (FE) codes. One of the factors determining the analysis accuracy is the representation of the components with suitable material models. While a uniaxial tensile test on the specimens typically provides engineering stress-strain data, material plasticity models in commercial FE solvers, such as LS-DYNA and ABAQUS, require equivalent plastic strain versus true stress as input. Engineering stress and strain can be converted to the corresponding true stress and true strain using equations based on the constant volume assumption; however, these equations are valid only up to the point of necking.
Journal Article

Development of a Lightweight Third-Generation Advanced High-Strength Steel (3GAHSS) Vehicle Body Structure

2018-04-03
2018-01-1026
This article covers an application of third-generation advanced high-strength steel (3GAHSS) grades to vehicle lightweight body structure development. Design optimization of a vehicle body structure using a multi-scale material model is discussed. The steps in the design optimization and results are presented. Results show a 30% mass reduction potential over a baseline mid-size sedan body side structure with the use of 3GAHSS.
Technical Paper

Characterization and Modeling of Instrument Panel Textile Trim Materials for Passenger Airbag Deployment Analysis

2023-04-11
2023-01-0930
Premium instrument panels (IPs) contain passenger airbag (PAB) systems that are typically comprised of a stiff plastic substrate and a soft ‘skin’ material which are adhesively bonded. During airbag deployment, the skin tears along the scored edges of the door holding the PAB system, the door opens, and the airbag inflates to protect the occupant. To accurately simulate the PAB deployment dynamics during a crash event all components of the instrument panel and the PAB system, including the skin, must be included in the model. It has been recognized that the material characterization and modeling of the skin tearing behavior are critical for predicting the timing and inflation kinematics of the airbag. Even so, limited data exists in the literature for skin material properties at hot and cold temperatures and at the strain rates created during the airbag deployment.
X