Fundamentals of Metal Forming
Fundamentals of Metal Forming
Fundamentals of Metal Forming
Metal Forming
Large group of manufacturing processes in which
plastic deformation is used to change the
shape of metal workpieces
The tool, usually called a die, applies stresses
that exceed the yield strength of the metal
The metal takes a shape determined by the
geometry of the die
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Mechanics
Material Science
Manufacturing Process
Design and Control
Machinery
Computer Skills
FEA
Students Need
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Rolling
Forging
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Extrusion
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Sheet Metalworking
Forming and related operations performed on
metal sheets, strips, and coils
High surface area-to-volume ratio of starting
metal, which distinguishes these from bulk
deformation
Often called pressworking because presses
perform these operations
Parts are called stampings
Usual tooling: punch and die
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Deep Drawing
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K n
Flow Stress
For most metals at room temperature, strength
increases when deformed due to strain
hardening
Flow stress = instantaneous value of stress
required to continue deforming the material
Yf K n
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Cold Working
Performed at room temperature or slightly
above
Many cold forming processes are important
mass production operations
Minimum or no machining usually required
These operations are near net shape or net
shape processes
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Warm Working
Performed at temperatures above room
temperature but below recrystallization
temperature
Dividing line between cold working and warm
working often expressed in terms of melting
point:
0.3Tm, where Tm = melting point (absolute
temperature) for metal
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Hot Working
Deformation at temperatures above the
recrystallization temperature
Recrystallization temperature = about one-half
of melting point on absolute scale
In practice, hot working usually performed
somewhat above 0.5Tm
Metal continues to soften as temperature
increases above 0.5Tm, enhancing
advantage of hot working above this level
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Figure 18.5 (a) Effect of strain rate on flow stress at an elevated work
temperature. (b) Same relationship plotted on log-log coordinates.
Yf = Cε m
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material behavior
As temperature increases, strain rate
becomes increasingly important in
determining flow stress
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