Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5016654 International Journal of Plasticity 2017 13 Pages PDF
Abstract
Electrically-assisted (EA) deformation has shown promising effects in increasing formability and reducing springback in sheet metal forming. This work experimentally and analytically investigated the influence of non-uniform and transient Joule heating on the plastic flow stress of titanium which evolved nonlinearity with time and deformation. Three-stage constitutive analysis was carried out in the present study. First, the pure influence of non-uniform Joule heating was investigated in terms of linear elastic thermal expansion, which then explained the measured drops in stress. Second, the Johnson-Cook model was adopted to interpret a plastic thermal-mechanical behavior of the material loaded at a constant quasi-static deformation rate under the uniaxial tension combined with a single pulse of electric current. Finally, it was revealed that the sudden change in strain rate and rapid heating rate due to an electric current pulse could give rise to the transient occurrence of dynamic strain aging (DSA) in materials. This resulted in an accumulated plastic strain as well as transient high-temperature strain hardening, which estimated the experimentally measured data well. The DSA contribution revealed in this work could help to explain many observations in the past studies in the field of EA deformation.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
Authors
, , , ,