Fundamentals of Metal Forming

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11/2/2011

FUNDAMENTALS OF METAL FORMING


1. Overview of Metal Forming
2. Material Behavior in Metal Forming
3. Temperature in Metal Forming
4. Strain Rate Sensitivity
5. Friction and Lubrication in 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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Importance of Metal Forming in


Manufacturing Engineering

 Net Shape or Close to Net Shape


 High Production Rate
 High Profit Margin
 Low Scrap Rate
 Improving Material Properties
 Etc.

Current Issues of Metal Forming


Industry

 Lack of Experienced Metal Forming


Engineer
 Short Product Life Cycle
 New Metallic Materials
 Developing New Hybrid Process
 High Accuracy and Small Feature
Products
 Etc.

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Skills Needed for Metal Forming


Engineering

 Mechanics
 Material Science
 Manufacturing Process
 Design and Control
 Machinery
 Computer Skills
 FEA

Students Need

 To know the current and future needs of


metal forming industry.

 To be taught on a series of classes to


meet challenges of current and future
metal forming industry.

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Stresses in Metal Forming


 Stresses to plastically deform the metal are
usually compressive
 Examples: rolling, forging, extrusion
 However, some forming processes
 Stretch the metal (tensile stresses)
 Others bend the metal (tensile and
compressive)
 Still others apply shear stresses

Material Properties in Metal Forming


 Desirable material properties:
 Low yield strength
 High ductility
 These properties are affected by temperature:
 Ductility increases and yield strength
decreases when work temperature is raised
 Other factors:
 Strain rate and friction

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Basic Types of Deformation Processes


1. Bulk deformation
 Rolling
 Forging
 Extrusion
 Wire and bar drawing
2. Sheet metalworking
 Bending
 Deep drawing
 Cutting
 Miscellaneous processes

Bulk Deformation Processes


 Characterized by significant deformations and
massive shape changes
 "Bulk" refers to workparts with relatively low
surface area-to-volume ratios
 Starting work shapes include cylindrical billets
and rectangular bars

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Rolling

Figure 18.2 Basic bulk deformation processes: (a) rolling

Forging

Figure 18.2 Basic bulk deformation processes: (b) forging

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Extrusion

Figure 18.2 Basic bulk deformation processes: (c) extrusion

Wire and Bar Drawing

Figure 18.2 Basic bulk deformation processes: (d) drawing

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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

Sheet Metal Bending

Figure 18.3 Basic sheet metalworking operations: (a) bending

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Deep Drawing

Figure 18.3 Basic sheet metalworking operations: (b) drawing

Shearing of Sheet Metal

Figure 18.3 Basic sheet metalworking operations: (c) shearing

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Material Behavior in Metal Forming


 Plastic region of stress-strain curve is primary
interest because material is plastically
deformed
 In plastic region, metal's behavior is expressed
by the flow curve:

  K n

where K = strength coefficient; and n = strain


hardening exponent
 Flow curve based on true stress and true strain

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

where Yf = flow stress, that is, the yield


strength as a function of strain

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Average Flow Stress


 Determined by integrating the flow curve
equation between zero and the final strain
value defining the range of interest
_ K n
Yf 
1 n
_
where Y = average flow stress; and  =
f
maximum strain during deformation process

Temperature in Metal Forming


 For any metal, K and n in the flow curve
depend on temperature
 Both strength (K) and strain hardening (n)
are reduced at higher temperatures
 In addition, ductility is increased at higher
temperatures

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Temperature in Metal Forming


 Any deformation operation can be
accomplished with lower forces and power at
elevated temperature
 Three temperature ranges in metal forming:
 Cold working
 Warm working
 Hot working

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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Advantages of Cold Forming


 Better accuracy, closer tolerances
 Better surface finish
 Strain hardening increases strength and
hardness
 Grain flow during deformation can cause
desirable directional properties in product
 No heating of work required

Disadvantages of Cold Forming


 Higher forces and power required in the
deformation operation
 Surfaces of starting workpiece must be free of
scale and dirt
 Ductility and strain hardening limit the amount
of forming that can be done
 In some cases, metal must be annealed to
allow further deformation
 In other cases, metal is simply not ductile
enough to be cold worked

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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

Advantages of Warm Working


 Lower forces and power than in cold working
 More intricate work geometries possible
 Need for annealing may be reduced or
eliminated

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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

Why Hot Working?


Capability for substantial plastic deformation of
the metal - far more than possible with cold
working or warm working
 Why?
 Strength coefficient (K) is substantially less
than at room temperature
 Strain hardening exponent (n) is zero
(theoretically)
 Ductility is significantly increased

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Advantages of Hot Working

 Workpart shape can be significantly altered


 Lower forces and power required
 Metals that usually fracture in cold working can
be hot formed
 Strength properties of product are generally
isotropic
 No strengthening of part occurs from work
hardening
 Advantageous in cases when part is to be
subsequently processed by cold forming

Disadvantages of Hot Working


 Lower dimensional accuracy
 Higher total energy required (due to the
thermal energy to heat the workpiece)
 Work surface oxidation (scale), poorer surface
finish
 Shorter tool life

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Strain Rate Sensitivity


 Theoretically, a metal in hot working behaves
like a perfectly plastic material, with strain
hardening exponent n = 0
 The metal should continue to flow at the
same flow stress, once that stress is
reached
 However, an additional phenomenon occurs
during deformation, especially at elevated
temperatures: Strain rate sensitivity

What is Strain Rate?


 Strain rate in forming is directly related to
speed of deformation v
 Deformation speed v = velocity of the ram or
other movement of the equipment
 Strain rate is defined: . v

. h
where  = true strain rate; and h =
instantaneous height of workpiece being
deformed

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Evaluation of Strain Rate


 In most practical operations, valuation of strain
rate is complicated by
 Workpart geometry
 Variations in strain rate in different regions
of the part
 Strain rate can reach 1000 s-1 or more for
some metal forming operations

Effect of Strain Rate on Flow Stress


 Flow stress is a function of temperature
 At hot working temperatures, flow stress also
depends on strain rate
 As strain rate increases, resistance to
deformation increases
 This effect is known as strain-rate sensitivity

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Strain Rate Sensitivity

Figure 18.5 (a) Effect of strain rate on flow stress at an elevated work
temperature. (b) Same relationship plotted on log-log coordinates.

Strain Rate Sensitivity Equation

Yf = Cε m

where C = strength constant (similar but


not equal to strength coefficient in flow
curve equation), and m = strain-rate
sensitivity exponent

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Effect of Temperature on Flow Stress

Figure 18.6 Effect of


temperature on flow stress
for a typical metal. The
constant C, as indicated by
the intersection of each plot
with the vertical dashed line
at strain rate = 1.0,
decreases, and m (slope of
each plot) increases with
increasing temperature.

Observations about Strain Rate Sensitivity


 Increasing temperature decreases C and
increases m
 At room temperature, effect of strain rate is
almost negligible
 Flow curve is a good representation of

material behavior
 As temperature increases, strain rate
becomes increasingly important in
determining flow stress

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Friction in Metal Forming


 In most metal forming processes, friction is
undesirable:
 Metal flow is retarded
 Forces and power are increased
 Tooling wears faster
 Friction and tool wear are more severe in hot
working

Lubrication in Metal Forming


 Metalworking lubricants are applied to
tool-work interface in many forming operations
to reduce harmful effects of friction
 Benefits:
 Reduced sticking, forces, power, tool wear
 Better surface finish
 Removes heat from the tooling

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Considerations in Choosing a Lubricant


 Type of forming process (rolling, forging, sheet
metal drawing, etc.)
 Hot working or cold working
 Work material
 Chemical reactivity with tool and work metals
 Ease of application
 Cost

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