Abstract

This paper focuses on the importance of taking into account scattering of material parameters (zinc in this example) to perform sheet metal forming simulations. The approach described in this paper is efficiently pragmatic to consider as inputs the material parameters obtained during the industrial quality process. Large amount of collected data enables to obtain statistical evolution of the material law parameters and to determine afterwards the variability domain which is the final goal of this work. In order to get these parameters, an automatic calculation of material parameters (consistency, hardening coefficient and stress criterion for the formability as described by Jansen et al. (2013)) is developed in this work. Tensile tests have been performed in three directions (0 degrees, 45 degrees and 90 degrees) and a Lagrangian interpolation was used for other orientations. In addition, scattering of the entire forming limit diagram is obtained from bulge tests performed for a sufficient statistical number of sheets. Based on this data, a numerical model integrating the scattering parameters was developed to build a statistical prediction of the stress failure criterion. All parameters of the material behavior law can be associated to the local calculations of the stress, strain, strain rate and temperature provided by a standard deterministic FEM computation and therefore giving a view of the failure rate of the process. This approach has been confronted to an industrial case describing the first forging pass of an elbow. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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