This article is focused on the formability limits by fracture obtained from standard bulk metal forming tests performed with cylindrical, tapered and flanged specimens. A total of two novel features are presented: the use of digital image correlation to determine strain paths and immersion of steel specimens in liquid nitrogen after the onset of crack formation to reveal the mode of fracture. A new methodology to determine the fracture loci in principal strain space is proposed based on the combination of experimental force-displacement evolutions with in-plane strain measurements. The experimental work is performed in cold-drawn steel AISI 1045 and two new formability tests with different values of stress triaxiality are proposed for obtaining strains at fracture in regions of principal strain space that are not sufficiently well covered by standard bulk metal forming tests.
This paper presents a new combined experimental and theoretical methodology for determining the formability limits by wrinkling in sheet metal forming. The methodology is based on the utilization of rectangular test specimens clamped along its narrower sides and compressed lengthwise and is aimed at replicating the physics behind the occurrence of wrinkling in deformation regions submitted to in-plane compression along one direction. The methodology draws from a previous development in the field of flexible roll forming, and the overall objectives are to enhance and improve its methods and procedures and to provide a new level of understanding on the onset of wrinkling in sheet metal forming. Experimentation and finite element modelling of cylindrical deep-drawing without blank holder combined with the utilization of the space of effective strain vs. stress triaxiality are employed to discuss the applicability and validity of the new proposed methodology for determining the formability limits by wrinkling.
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