Abstract

This study introduces a modified DF2016 criterion to model a ductile fracture of sheet metals from shear to equibiaxial tension. The DF2016 criterion is modified so that a material constant is equal to the fracture strain at equibiaxial tension, which can be easily measured by the bulging experiments. To evaluate the performance of the modified DF2016 criterion, experiments are conducted for QP980 with five different specimens with stress states from shear to equibiaxial tension. The plasticity of the steel is characterized by the Swift-Voce hardening law and the pDrucker function, which is calibrated with the inverse engineering approach. A fracture strain is measured by the XTOP digital image correlation system for all the specimens, including the bulging test. The modified DF2016 criterion is also calibrated with the inverse engineering approach. The predicted force-stroke curves are compared with experimental results to evaluate the performance of the modified DF2016 criterion on the fracture prediction from shear to equibiaxial tension. The comparison shows that the modified DF2016 criterion can model the onset of the ductile fracture with high accuracy in wide stress states from shear to plane strain tension. Moreover, the calibration of the modified DF2016 criterion is comparatively easier than the original DF2016 criterion.

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