Strain Localization during Equal-Channel Angular Pressing Analyzed by Finite Element Simulations (bibtex)

by T. D. Horn, C. B. Silbermann, P. Frint, M. F.-X. Wagner, J. Ihlemann

Abstract:
Equal-Channel Angular Pressing (ECAP) is a method used to introduce severe plastic deformation into a metallic billet without changing its geometry. In special cases, strain localization occurs and a pattern consisting of regions with high and low deformation (so-called shear and matrix bands) can emerge. This paper studies this phenomenon numerically adopting two-dimensional finite element simulations of one ECAP pass. The mechanical behavior of aluminum is modeled using phenomenological plasticity theory with isotropic or kinematic hardening. The effects of the two different strain hardening types are investigated numerically by systematic parameter studies: while isotropic hardening only causes minor fluctuations in the plastic strain fields, a material with high initial hardening rate and sufficient strain hardening capacity can exhibit pronounced localized deformation after ECAP. The corresponding finite element simulation results show a regular pattern of shear and matrix bands. This result is confirmed experimentally by ECAP-processing of AA6060 material in a severely cold worked condition, where microstructural analysis also reveals the formation of shear and matrix bands. Excellent agreement is found between the experimental and numerical results in terms of shear and matrix band width and length scale. The simulations provide additional insights regarding the evolution of the strain and stress states in shear and matrix bands.
Reference:
Horn, T. D., Silbermann, C. B., Frint, P., Wagner, M. F.-X., Ihlemann, J.: Strain Localization during Equal-Channel Angular Pressing Analyzed by Finite Element Simulations, Metals 8, 55, 2018.
Bibtex Entry:
@Article{Horn2018,
  author    = {Horn, T. D. and Silbermann, C. B. and Frint, P. and Wagner, M. F.-X. and Ihlemann, J.},
  title     = {Strain Localization during Equal-Channel Angular Pressing Analyzed by Finite Element Simulations},
  journal   = {Metals},
  year      = {2018},
  volume    = {8},
  number    = {1},
  pages     = {55},
  month     = {jan},
  abstract  = {Equal-Channel Angular Pressing (ECAP) is a method used to introduce severe plastic deformation into a metallic billet without changing its geometry. In special cases, strain localization occurs and a pattern consisting of regions with high and low deformation (so-called shear and matrix bands) can emerge. This paper studies this phenomenon numerically adopting two-dimensional finite element simulations of one ECAP pass. The mechanical behavior of aluminum is modeled using phenomenological plasticity theory with isotropic or kinematic hardening. The effects of the two different strain hardening types are investigated numerically by systematic parameter studies: while isotropic hardening only causes minor fluctuations in the plastic strain fields, a material with high initial hardening rate and sufficient strain hardening capacity can exhibit pronounced localized deformation after ECAP. The corresponding finite element simulation results show a regular pattern of shear and matrix bands. This result is confirmed experimentally by ECAP-processing of AA6060 material in a severely cold worked condition, where microstructural analysis also reveals the formation of shear and matrix bands. Excellent agreement is found between the experimental and numerical results in terms of shear and matrix band width and length scale. The simulations provide additional insights regarding the evolution of the strain and stress states in shear and matrix bands.},
  doi       = {10.3390/met8010055},
  publisher = {{MDPI} {AG}},
}
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