The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials

Magnesium (Mg) alloy sheets possess several key properties that make them attractive as lightweight replacements for heavier ferrous and non-ferrous alloy sheets. However, Mg alloys need to be formed at elevated temperatures to overcome their limited room-temperature formabilities. For example, comm...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Antoniswamy, Aravindha Raja
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
FEM
FLD
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26076
id ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-26076
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-260762015-09-20T17:25:30ZThe construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materialsAntoniswamy, Aravindha RajaMagnesiumFormingFEMModelsAZ31BZEK100DeformationFLDPlastic anisotropyCrystallographic textureMagnesium (Mg) alloy sheets possess several key properties that make them attractive as lightweight replacements for heavier ferrous and non-ferrous alloy sheets. However, Mg alloys need to be formed at elevated temperatures to overcome their limited room-temperature formabilities. For example, commercial forming is presently conducted at 450°C. Deformation behavior of the most commonly used wrought Mg alloy, AZ31B-H24, and two potentially competitive materials, AZ31B-HR and ZEK100 alloy sheets, with weaker crystallographic textures, are studied in uniaxial tension at 450°C and lower temperatures. The underlying physics of deformation including the operating deformation mechanisms, grain growth, normal and planar anisotropy, and strain hardening are used to construct material constitutive models capable of predicting forming for all three Mg alloy sheets at 450°C and 350°C. The material models constructed are implemented in finite-element-method (FEM) simulations and validated using biaxial bulge forming, an independent testing method. Forming limit diagrams are presented for the AZ31B-H24 and ZEK100 alloy sheets at temperatures from 450°C down to 250°C. The results suggest that forming processes at temperatures lower than 450°C are potentially viable for manufacturing complex Mg components.text2014-09-22T17:40:18Z2013-082013-09-09August 20132014-09-22T17:40:18ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26076
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Magnesium
Forming
FEM
Models
AZ31B
ZEK100
Deformation
FLD
Plastic anisotropy
Crystallographic texture
spellingShingle Magnesium
Forming
FEM
Models
AZ31B
ZEK100
Deformation
FLD
Plastic anisotropy
Crystallographic texture
Antoniswamy, Aravindha Raja
The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
description Magnesium (Mg) alloy sheets possess several key properties that make them attractive as lightweight replacements for heavier ferrous and non-ferrous alloy sheets. However, Mg alloys need to be formed at elevated temperatures to overcome their limited room-temperature formabilities. For example, commercial forming is presently conducted at 450°C. Deformation behavior of the most commonly used wrought Mg alloy, AZ31B-H24, and two potentially competitive materials, AZ31B-HR and ZEK100 alloy sheets, with weaker crystallographic textures, are studied in uniaxial tension at 450°C and lower temperatures. The underlying physics of deformation including the operating deformation mechanisms, grain growth, normal and planar anisotropy, and strain hardening are used to construct material constitutive models capable of predicting forming for all three Mg alloy sheets at 450°C and 350°C. The material models constructed are implemented in finite-element-method (FEM) simulations and validated using biaxial bulge forming, an independent testing method. Forming limit diagrams are presented for the AZ31B-H24 and ZEK100 alloy sheets at temperatures from 450°C down to 250°C. The results suggest that forming processes at temperatures lower than 450°C are potentially viable for manufacturing complex Mg components. === text
author Antoniswamy, Aravindha Raja
author_facet Antoniswamy, Aravindha Raja
author_sort Antoniswamy, Aravindha Raja
title The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
title_short The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
title_full The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
title_fullStr The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
title_full_unstemmed The construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
title_sort construction and use of physics-based plasticity models and forming-limit diagrams to predict elevated temperature forming of three magnesium alloy sheet materials
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26076
work_keys_str_mv AT antoniswamyaravindharaja theconstructionanduseofphysicsbasedplasticitymodelsandforminglimitdiagramstopredictelevatedtemperatureformingofthreemagnesiumalloysheetmaterials
AT antoniswamyaravindharaja constructionanduseofphysicsbasedplasticitymodelsandforminglimitdiagramstopredictelevatedtemperatureformingofthreemagnesiumalloysheetmaterials
_version_ 1716823952368599040