EMM 315 Materials Forming Processes - METAL FORMING
EMM 315 Materials Forming Processes - METAL FORMING
EMM 315 Materials Forming Processes - METAL FORMING
Metal forming: Large set of manufacturing processes in which the material is deformed
plastically to take the shape of the die geometry. The tools used for such deformation
are called die, punch etc. depending on the type of process.
Plastic deformation: Stresses beyond yield strength of the workpiece material is
required.
Categories: Bulk metal forming, Sheet metal forming
stretching
Forging
Wire drawing
Extrusion
Rolling
Bulk forming: It is a severe deformation process resulting in massive shape change. The
surface area-to-volume of the work is relatively small. Mostly done in hot working conditions.
Rolling: In this process, the workpiece in the form of slab or plate is compressed between two
rotating rolls in the thickness direction, so that the thickness is reduced. The rotating rolls draw
the slab into the gap and compresses it. The final product is in the form of sheet.
Forging: The workpiece is compressed between two dies containing shaped contours. The die
shapes are imparted into the final part.
Extrusion: In this, the workpiece is compressed or pushed into the die opening to take the
shape of the die hole as its cross section.
Wire or rod drawing: similar to extrusion, except that the workpiece is pulled through the die
opening to take the cross-section.
Classification of basic sheet forming processes
Bending: In this, the sheet material is strained by punch to give a bend shape (angle shape)
usually in a straight axis.
Deep (or cup) drawing: In this operation, forming of a flat metal sheet into a hollow or concave
shape like a cup, is performed by stretching the metal in some regions. A blank-holder is used to
clamp the blank on the die, while the punch pushes into the sheet metal. The sheet is drawn into
the die hole taking the shape of the cavity.
Shearing: This is nothing but cutting of sheets by shearing action.
Cold working, warm working, hot working
Warm working: In this case, forming is performed at temperatures just above room
temperature but below the recrystallization temperature. The working temperature is
taken to be 0.3 Tm where Tm is the melting point of the workpiece.
Advantages: (1) enhanced plastic deformation properties, (2) lower forces required, (3)
intricate work geometries possible, (4) annealing stages can be reduced.
Hot working: Involves deformation above recrystallization temperature,
between 0.5Tm to 0.75Tm.
flashless forging
In impression die forging, the die surfaces contain a shape that is given to the work
piece during compression, thus restricting the metal flow significantly. There is some
extra deformed material outside the die impression which is called as flash. This will
be trimmed off later.
In flashless forging, the work piece is fully restricted within the die and no flash is
produced. The amount of initial work piece used must be controlled accurately so
that it matches the volume of the die cavity.
Open die forging
A simplest example of open die forging is compression of billet between two flat die
halves which is like compression test. This also known as upsetting or upset forging.
Basically height decreases and diameter increases.
Under ideal conditions, where there is no friction between the billet and die surfaces,
homogeneous deformation occurs. In this, the diameter increases uniformly
throughout its height.
In ideal condition, ε = ln (ho/h). h will be equal to hf at the end of compression, ε will
be maximum for the whole forming. Also F = σf A is used to find the force required for
forging, where σf is the flow stress corresponding to ε at that stage of forming.
µ2 > µ1
µ2
µ1
µ0
Long cylinder: h/D >2 Cylinder having h/D < 2 Frictionless compression
with friction
Closed die forging
Closed die forging called as impression die forging is performed in dies which has the
impression that will be imparted to the work piece through forming.
In the intermediate stage, the initial billet deforms partially giving a bulged shape.
During the die full closure, impression is fully filled with deformed billet and further
moves out of the impression to form flash.
In multi stage operation, separate die cavities are required for shape change. In the
initial stages, uniform distribution of properties and microstructure are seen. In the final
stage, actual shape modification is observed. When drop forging is used, several blows
of the hammer may be required for each step.
Now selecting the proper value of flow stress is difficult because the strain
varies throughout the work piece for complex shapes and hence the
strength varies. Sometimes an average strength is used. Kf is used for
taking care of different shapes of parts. Table shows the typical values of Kf
used for force calculation. In hot working, appropriate flow stress at that
temperature is used.
The above equation is applied to find the maximum force during the
operation, since this is the load that will determine the required capacity of
the press used in the forging operation.
Impression die forging is not capable of making close tolerance objects.
Machining is generally required to achieve the accuracies needed. The basic
geometry of the part is obtained from the forging process, with subsequent
machining done on those portions of the part that require precision finishing
like holes, threads etc.
In order to improve the efficiency of closed die forging, precision forging was
developed that can produce forgings with thin sections, more complex
geometries, closer tolerances, and elimination of machining allowances. In
precision forging operations, sometimes machining is fully eliminated which is
called near-net shape forging.
Flashless forging
The three stages of flashless forging is shown below:
In flashless forging, most important is that the work piece volume must
equal the space in the die cavity within a very close tolerance.
If the starting billet size is too large, excessive pressures will cause damage
to the die and press.
If the billet size is too small, the cavity will not be filled.
Draft: It is the amount of taper given on the sides of the part required to
remove it from the die.
Draft angles: It is meant for easy removal of part after operation is completed.
3° for Al and Mg parts; 5° to 7° for steel parts.
Webs and ribs: They are thin portions of the forging that is parallel and
perpendicular to the parting line. More difficulty is witnessed in forming the
part as they become thinner.
Fillet and corner radii: Small radii limits the metal flow and increase stresses
on die surfaces during forging.
Upset forging is widely used in the fastener industries to form heads on nails, bolts,
and similar products.
Heading a die using open die forging Round head formed by punch only
Long bar stock (work piece) is fed into the machines by horizontal slides, the end of
the stock is upset forged, and the piece is cut to appropriate length to make the
desired product. The maximum length that can be upset in a single blow is three
times the diameter of the initial wire stock.
Swaging:
Swaging is used to reduce the diameter of a tube or a rod at the end of the
work piece to create a tapered section. In general, this process is conducted
by means of rotating dies that hammer a workpiece in radial direction inward
to taper it as the piece is fed into the dies. A mandrel is required to control the
shape and size of the internal diameter of tubular parts during swaging.
Swaging
Radial forging:
This operation is same as swaging,
except that in radial forging, the dies do
not rotate around the work piece,
instead, the work is rotated as it feeds
into the hammering dies.
Because of the inclined axis of cone, only a small area of the work surface is
compressed at any stage of forming. As the upper die revolves, the area
under compression also revolves. Because of partial deformation contact at
any stage of forming, there is a substantial reduction in press load
requirement.
Isothermal forging:
It is a hot-forging operation in which the work is maintained at some
elevated temperature during forming. The forging dies are also maintained
at the same elevated temperature. By avoiding chill of the work in contact
with the cold die surfaces, the metal flows more readily and the force
requirement is reduced.
The process is expensive than conventional forging and is usually meant for
difficult-to-forge metals, like Ti, superalloys, and for complex part shapes.
The process is done in vacuum or inert atmosphere to avoid rapid oxidation
of the die material.
Extrusion
Extrusion is a bulk forming process in which the work metal is forced or
compressed to flow through a die hole to produce a desired cross-sectional
shape. Example: squeezing toothpaste from a toothpaste tube.
Advantages :
- Variety of shapes are possible, especially using hot extrusion
- Grain structure and strength properties are enhanced in cold and warm
extrusion
- Close tolerances are possible, mainly in cold extrusion
Types of extrusion:
Direct or forward extrusion, Indirect or backward extrusion
Direct extrusion: - A metal billet is first loaded into a container having die
holes. A ram compresses the material, forcing it to flow through the die holes.
- Some extra portion of the billet will be present at the end of the process that
cannot be extruded and is called butt. It is separated from the product by
cutting it just beyond the exit of the die.
Direct extrusion
Hollow sections like tubes can be made using direct extrusion setup shown in
above figure. The starting billet is prepared with a hole parallel to its axis. As
the billet is compressed, the material will flow through the gap between the
mandrel and the die opening.
Indirect extrusion: - In this type, the die is mounted to the ram and not on the
container. As the ram compresses the metal, it flows through the die hole on
the ram side which is in opposite direction to the movement of ram.
- Since there is no relative motion between the billet and the container, there is
no friction at the interface, and hence the ram force is lower than in direct
extrusion.
- Limitations: lower rigidity of the hollow ram, difficulty in supporting the
extruded product at the exit
Indirect extrusion: solid billet and hollow billet
The actual pressure for extrusion will be greater than in ideal case, because
of the friction between billet and die and billet and container wall.
There are various equations used to evaluate the actual true strain and
associated ram pressure during extrusion. The following relation proposed
by Johnson is of great interest.
x a b ln re a b p Yf x
Where x is extrusion strain; a and b are empirical constants for a given die
angle. Typical values are: a = 0.8, b = 1.2 - 1.5.
In direct extrusion, assuming that friction exists at the interface, we can find
the actual extrusion pressure as follows:
The above eqn. assume sliding friction condition. Assuming sticking friction at the
interface, we can write:
p f D0 2
KD0 L Where K is shear yield strength & m = 1
4
The above eqn. gives, 4 KL
pf
D0
2L
we get, p f Y f
Yf
Assuming, K
2 D0
This is the additional pressure required to
overcome friction during extrusion.
p
p
Sticking friction
mK
A billet 75 mm long and 25 mm in diameter is to be extruded in a direct
extrusion operation with extrusion ratio re = 4.0. The extrudate has a round
cross section. The die angle (half angle) is 90°. The work metal has a
strength coefficient of 415 MPa, and strain-hardening exponent of 0.18.
Use the Johnson formula with a = 0.8 and b=1.5 to estimate extrusion strain.
Find the pressure applied to the end of the billet as the ram moves forward.
Empirical formulae for extrusion pressure
N A1 A2
pe 0.262 F ( Ar ) 0.787
(2 ) 0.375
Where Ar = percent reduction in area =
A1
100
mm2
Yield strength of steel
F
Yield strength of lead
Extrusion dies
- Two important factors in an extrusion die are: die angle, orifice shape.
- For low die angles, surface area of the die is large, resulting in increased
friction at the die-billet interface. Higher friction results in higher ram force.
- For a large die angle, more turbulence in the metal flow is caused during
reduction, increasing the ram force required.
- The shape of the die orifice affects the ram pressure required to perform an
extrusion operation, as it determines the amount of squeezing of metal billet.
-The effect of the die orifice shape can be assessed by the die shape factor,
defined as the ratio of the pressure required to extrude a cross section of a
given shape relative to the extrusion pressure for a circular cross section of
the same area.
2.25
cx
k x 0.98 0.02
cc
Where kx is the die shape factor in extrusion; Cx is the perimeter of the
extruded cross section, and Cc is the perimeter of a circle of the same area as
the actual extruded shape.
cx
varies from 1 to 6.
cc
Die materials
Important properties of die materials are high wear resistance, high thermal
conductivity to remove heat from the process.
Hydrostatic extrusion:
Hydrostatic extrusion
In hydrostatic extrusion, the billet is surrounded with fluid inside the
container and the fluid is pressurized by the forward motion of the ram.
There is no friction inside the container because of the fluid, and friction is
minimized at the die opening. If used at high temperatures, special fluids
and procedures must be followed.
This process is also applicable for ductile metals, and here high reduction
ratios are possible.
A
d Y f ln( 0 ) K n
Here Y f ,Y f is the average flow stress
Af 1 n
corresponding to ε mentioned in above equation.
In order to consider the effect of die angle and friction coefficient on the drawing
stress, Schey has proposed another equation as shown below:
A
d Y f 1 ln( 0 )
tan Af
Here is a term that accounts for inhomogeneous deformation which is found
by the following eqn. for round cross-section.
D
0.88 0.12 Here D is the average diameter of the workpiece, LC is the
Lc contact length of the work with die given by,
D0 D f D0 D f
D ; LC
2 2 sin
Finally the drawing force is given by, F = Afσd
Wire is drawn through a draw die with entrance angle 15°. Starting diameter is 2.5 mm
and final diameter 2 mm. The coefficient of friction at the work–die interface is 0.07.
The metal has a strength coefficient K = 205 MPa and a strain-hardening exponent n =
0.2. Determine the draw stress and draw force in this operation.
Maximum reduction per pass
Increase in reduction, increase the draw stress. If the reduction is large
enough, draw stress will exceed the yield strength of the material. Then the
wire will just elongate rather than new material being drawn into the die
hole. To have a successful wire drawing operation, drawing stress should be
less than yield strength of the drawn metal.
Assume a perfectly plastic material (n = 0), no friction and redundant work,
then,
A0 A0 1
d Y f ln( ) Y ln( ) Y ln( ) Y
Af Af 1 r
which means that A0 1
ln( ) ln( ) 1
Af 1 r
This gives a condition that the maximum possible reduction, rmax is
rmax = 0.632 (theoretical maximum limit)
This analysis ignores the effects of friction and redundant work, which would further reduce the
maximum value, and strain hardening, which would increase the maximum reduction because
of the stronger wire than the starting metal. Reductions of 0.5-0.3 per pass seem to be
possible in industrial operations.
Drawing equipment
Continuous drawing of
wire
Drawing dies
The bearing surface or land, determines the size of the final drawn work-piece.
Finally, the back relief is the exit zone. It is provided with a back relief angle (half-angle) of
about 25-30°.
Tube drawing
This operation is used to reduce the diameter or wall thickness of the seamless tubes
and pipes. Tube drawing can be done either with or without mandrel. The simplest
method uses no mandrel and is used for diameter reduction called as tube
sinking. But inside diameter and wall thickness cannot be controlled. So mandrel is
required.
Die Tube
Rod
Mandrel
Die
Floating mandrel
(b) Tube drawing without mandrel (d) Tube drawing with floating mandrel
(TUBE SINKING)
Using a fixed mandrel: In this case, a mandrel is attached to a long support
bar to control the inside diameter and wall thickness during the operation.
The length of the support bar restricts the length of the tube that can be
drawn.
Using a floating plug: As the name suggests the mandrel floats inside the
tube and its shape is designed so that it finds a suitable position in the
reduction zone of the die. There is no length restriction in this as seen with
the fixed mandrel.
Rolling
Rolling is a metal forming process in which the thickness of the work is reduced by
compressive forces exerted by two rolls rotating in opposite direction. Flat rolling is
shown in figure. Similarly shape rolling is also possible like a square cross section is
formed into a shape such as an I-beam, L-beam.
Flat rolling
Important terminologies:
Bloom: It has a square cross section 150 mm x 150 mm or more.
Slab: It is rolled from an ingot or a bloom and has a rectangular cross section of 250
mm width or more and thickness 40 mm or more.
Billet: It is rolled from a bloom and is square in cross-section with dimensions 40mm
on a side or more.
Blooms are rolled into structural shapes like rails for railroad tracks.
Billets are rolled into bars, rods. They become raw materials for machining,
wire drawing, forging, extrusion etc.
Slabs are rolled into plates, sheets, and strips. Hot rolled plates are generally
used in shipbuilding, bridges, boilers, welded structures for various heavy
machines, and many other products.
The plates and sheets are further reduced in thickness by cold rolling to
strengthen the metal and permits a tighter tolerance on thickness.
Important advantage is that the surface of the cold-rolled sheet does not
contain scales and generally superior to the corresponding hot rolled
product.
Later the cold-rolled sheets are used for stampings, exterior panels, and
other parts used in automobile, aerospace and house hold appliance
industries.
Simple analysis of flat strip rolling
The schematic of flat rolling is shown in previous slides. It involves rolling of
sheets, plates having rectangular cross section in which the width is greater
than the thickness.
In flat rolling, the plate thickness is reduced by squeezing between two rolls.
The thickness reduction is quantified by draft which is given by,
d = t0 – tf
here t0 and tf are initial thickness and final thickness of the sheet used for
rolling.
The true strain is used to find the average flow stress (Yf) and further rolling
power, force.
Kn
Yf
1 n
On the entry side of the neutral point, friction force is in one direction, and on
the other side it is in the opposite direction, i.e., the friction force acts towards the
neutral point. But the two forces are unequal.
The friction force on the entry side is greater, so that the net force pulls the sheet
through the rolls. Otherwise, rolling would not be possible.
The limit to the maximum possible draft that can be accomplished in flat rolling is
given by,
d max 2 R
The equation indicates that if friction were zero, draft is zero, and it is not possible
to accomplish the rolling operation.
The friction coefficient in rolling depends on lubrication, work material, and
working temperature.
In cold rolling, the value is app. 0.1, in warm rolling, a typical value is around
0.2; and in hot rolling, it is around 0.4.
The rolling power required for two powered rolls is given by, P = (2πN)FL (watts)
Area under the curve, L
Typical variation in roll pressure along the contact length in flat rolling
A 300 mm wide strip, 25 mm thick, is fed through a rolling mill with two powered rolls
each of radius 250 mm. The work thickness is to be reduced to 22 mm in one pass at a
roll speed of 50 rev/min. The work material has a flow curve defined by K = 275 MPa and
n = 0.15, and the coefficient of friction between the rolls and the work is 0.12. Determine if the
friction is sufficient to permit the rolling operation to be accomplished. If so, calculate the roll
force, and horsepower (or rolling power).
Inference from equations: The strip rolling force and/or power of a given width and work
material can be reduced by the following methods: (1) using hot rolling rather than cold rolling to
reduce strength and strain hardening (K and n) of the work material; (2) reducing the draft in
each rolling pass; (3) using a smaller roll radius ‘R’ to reduce force; and (4) using a lower rolling
speed ‘N’ to reduce power.
Rolling mills
Two high rolling mill: This type of rolling mill consists of two rolls rotating in
opposite directions.
Non-reversing mill: rolls rotate only in one direction, and the slab always
move from entry to exit side.
Reversing mill: direction of roll rotation is reversed, after each pass, so that
the slab can be passed through in both the directions. This permits a
continuous reductions to be made through the same pairs of rolls.
Two
R. Ganesh Narayanan, high rolling mill
IITG
Three high rolling mill: In this case, there are three
rolls one above the other. At a time, for single pass,
two rolls will be used. The roll direction will not be
changed in this case.
The top two rolls will be used for first reduction and
the sheet is shifted to the bottom two rolls and
further reduction is done. This cycle is continued till
actual reduction is attained.
Disadvantage: automated mechanism is required to
shift the slab Three high rolling mill
Four high rolling mill: This consists of two small rolls for
thickness reduction and two large backing rolls to
support the small rolls.
The small rolls will reduce the roll force required as the
roll-sheet contact area will be reduced.
The large backing rolls are required to reduce the elastic
deflection of small rolls when sheet passes between
them.
Four high rolling mill
Cluster rolling mill: This uses smaller rolls for rolling
Thread rolling is used to create threads on cylindrical parts by rolling them between
two dies as shown in figure.
It is used for mass production of external threaded parts like bolts and screws.
Ring rolling
Ring rolling is a forming process in which a thick walled ring part of smaller diameter
is rolled into a thin walled ring of larger diameter.
As the thick walled ring is compressed, the deformed material elongates, making the
diameter of the ring to be enlarged.
Application: ball and roller bearing races, steel tires for railroad wheels, rings for
pipes, pressure vessels, and rotating machinery
Start of process (thick Completion of process
walled, small diameter) (thin walled, large
diameter)
Ring rolling
Defects in strip rolling
Waviness
Aligatoring
Sheet forming operations
Sheet forming:
Involves plastic deformation of sheets like deep drawing, cutting, bending,
hemming, flanging, curling, stretch forming/stretching, stamping etc.
shearing
R. Ganesh Narayanan, IITG
Straight flanging stretch flanging shrink flanging
The clearance ‘c’ is defined to equal to 10% more than the sheet thickness ‘t’. If the
clearance between the die and the punch is less than the sheet thickness, then
ironing occurs.
c 1.1t
Stages in deep drawing:
(i) As the punch pushes the sheet, it is subjected to a bending operation. Bending of
sheet occurs over the punch corner and die corner. The outside perimeter of the blank
moves slightly inwards toward the cup center.
(ii) In this stage, the sheet region that was bent over the die corner will be straightened
in the clearance region at this stage, so that it will become cup wall region. In order to
compensate the presence of sheet in cup wall, more metal will be pulled from the
sheet edge, i.e., more metal moves into the die opening.
(iii) Friction between the sheet and the die, blank holder surfaces restricts the
movement of sheet into the die opening. The blank holding force also influences the
movement. Lubricants or drawing compounds are generally used to reduce friction
forces.
(iv) Other than friction, compression occurs at the edge of the sheet. Since the
perimeter is reduced, the sheet is squeezed into the die opening. Because volume
remains constant, with reduction in perimeter, thickening occurs at the edge.
In thin sheets, this is reflected in the form of wrinkling. This also occurs in case of low
blank holding force. If BHF very small, wrinkling occurs. If it is high, it prevents the
sheet from flowing properly toward the die hole, resulting in stretching and tearing of
sheet.
(v) The final cup part will have some thinning in side wall.
Stages in cup deep drawing
Friction force reaches peak early and
then decreases as the contact area
decreases between the sheet and BH Increases with increase in strain
because of strain hardening
Punch force-stroke for cup deep drawing: Ironing occurs late in the
contribution from three important factors process once the cup wall has
reached the maximum thickness
Quantification of cup drawability
Drawing ratio: ratio of blank diameter, Db, to punch diameter, Dp. The greater
the ratio, the more severe the drawing operation.
Db
DR
DP
The limiting value for a given operation depends on punch and die corner
radii, friction conditions, draw depth, and quality of the sheet metal like
ductility, degree of directionality of strength properties in the metal.
Db
F D p t UTS 0.7
D
p
Correction factor for friction
Fh 0.015 ys Db Dp 2.2t 2Rd
2 2
F
Fh (approx. holding force is one-third of drawing force)
3
A cup drawing operation is performed in which the inside diameter = 80 mm and
the height = 50 mm. The stock thickness = 3 mm, and the starting blank diameter
= 150 mm. Punch and die radii = 4 mm. Tensile strength = 400 MPa and a yield
strength = 180 MPa for this sheet metal. Determine: (a) drawing ratio, (b)
reduction, (c) drawing force, and (d) blankholder force.
Redrawing
In many cases, the shape change involved in making that part will be severe
(drawing ratio is very high). In such cases, complete forming of the part
requires more than one deep drawing step.
Redrawing refers to any further drawing steps that is required to complete
the drawing operation.
Redrawing
Wrinkling in flange and cup wall: This is like ups and downs or waviness that is developed on
the flange. If the flange is drawn into the die hole, it will be retained in cup wall region.
Tearing: It is a crack in the cup, near the base, happening due to high tensile stresses causing
thinning and failure of the metal at this place. This can also occur due to sharp die corner.
Earing: The height of the walls of drawn cups have peaks and valleys called as earing. There
may be more than four ears. Earing results from planar anisotropy (∆R), and ear height and
angular position correlate well with the angular variation of R.
Surface scratches: Usage of rough punch, dies and poor lubrication cause scratches in a
drawn cup.
Sheet bending
Sheet bending is defined as the straining of the metal around a straight axis as
shown in figure. During bending operation, the metal on the inner side of the neutral
plane is compressed, and the metal on the outer side of the neutral plane is
stretched. Bending causes no change in the thickness of the sheet metal.
In V-bending, the sheet metal is bent between a V-shaped punch and die set up. The
included angles range from very obtuse to very acute values.
In edge bending, cantilever loading of the sheet is seen. A pressure pad is used to apply a
force to hold the sheet against the die, while the punch forces the sheet to yield and bend
over the edge of the die.
Deformation during bending
y
C0 D0 C D
A0 B0 t A
l0 B
For our analysis, it may be assumed that a plane normal section in the sheet will
remain plane and normal and converge on the center of curvature as shown in
Figure. The line A0B0 at the middle surface may change its length to AB, if the sheet
is under stretching during bending. The original length lo becomes, ls = ρθ. A line
C0D0 at a distance y from the middle surface will deform to a length,
y y
l ( y ) (1 ) l s (1 ) where ρ is the radius of curvature.
The axial strain of the fiber CD is, l l y
1 ln ln s ln 1 a b (1)
l0 l0
where ‘εa’ and ‘εb’ are the strains at the middle surface and bending strain
respectively.
In the case of bending with radius of curvature larger compared to the thickness,
the bending strain is approximated as,
y y
b ln 1
sheet
t/
y y
2
t/
2
For the strain distribution given by equation (1) for bending, the stress distribution on
a section can be found out by knowing a stress-strain law.
Generally elastic-plastic strain hardening behavior is seen in sheet bending. But
there are other assumptions also.
Elastic, perfectly plastic model: Strain hardening may not be important for a bend
ratio (ρ/t) (radius of curvature/thickness) of about 50. For this case the stress-strain
behavior is shown in Figure below.
σ1
σ1 = S σ1
ε1
Strain hardening model: When the strains are large, elastic strains can be
neglected, and the power hardening law can be followed.
σ1
σ1 = K’ ε1n
σ1 = K’ ε1n
ε1
Spring back
•Spring back occurs because of the variation in bending stresses across
the thickness, i.e., from inner surface to neutral axis to outer surface. The
tensile stresses decrease and become zero at the neutral axis.
•Since the tensile stresses above neutral axis cause plastic deformation,
the stress at any point (say ‘A’) in the tensile stress zone should be less
than the ultimate tensile strength in a typical tensile stress-strain behavior.
The outer surface will crack, if the tensile stress is greater than ultimate
stress during bending.
•The metal region closer to the neutral axis has been stressed to values
below the elastic limit. This elastic deformation zone is a narrow band on
both sides of the neutral axis, as shown in Fig. The metal region farther
away from the axis has undergone plastic deformation, and obviously is
beyond the yield strength.
•Upon load removal after first bending, the elastic band tries to return to the
original flat condition but cannot, due to the restriction given by the plastic
deformed regions. Some return occurs as the elastic and plastic zones
reach an equilibrium condition and this return is named as spring back.
Tensile
stress, A σ
UTS
A
Failure
Zero
Neutral axis
Yield strength
Elastic limit
ε
Changing stress patterns in a bend
ASM handbook, sheet metal forming
Neutral axis
' tool
SB
tool
Stretching/stretch forming
Stretching/stretch forming
Forming limit diagram (FLD)
Major strain
- Limit strain
failure
Major strain
Deep drawing
strainpath Bi-axial stretching
strainpath
Plane-strain
strainpath
Minor strain
From tensile test we get only ductility, work
hardening exponent, but it is in a uniaxial tension
without friction, which cannot truly represent
material behaviours obtained from actual sheet
forming operations.