Abstract

Due to high thermo-mechanical loads, tools used in hot forming operations need a high resistance to different damage phenomena, such as deformation, cracking and abrasion. They are exposed to cyclic thermo-mechanical stress conditions, which leads to tool failure and subsequent tool replacement during cost-intensive production interruptions. To increase wear resistance, forging tools can be produced in the metastable austenite area. Forming of steel below the recrystallisation temperature, also known as “ausforming”, offers the possibility to increase strength without affecting ductile properties. This is due to grain refinement during forming. In this study, the thermo-mechanical treatment ausforming will be used to form the final contour of forging dies. For this purpose, an analogy study was performed where a cup-preform is ausformed, which represents the inner contour of a highly mechanically loaded forging die. It is investigated to what extent a fine-grained microstructure generated in the last forming stage can be achieved and how it influences the tool’s performance. The hot-working tool steel X37CrMoV5-1 (AISI H11) was used as workpiece material. To achieve optimal properties, process routes with tempering temperatures from 300 °C to 500 °C and global true plastic strains of φ = 0.25 and φ = 0.45 were examined. The results were evaluated by pulsation tests, metallographic analysis and hardness measurements of the formed parts. Optimal ausforming parameters were derived to produce a high performance forging die.

Highlights

  • Increasing the service life of forging tools improves the economic efficiency of forging production

  • The bottom thickness is decisive for the global true plastic strain while ausforming and for the material flow that occurs during forming process in the metastable austenite range

  • The comparison of the number of cycles at different true plastic strains shows that test series with a smaller deformation endured a larger number of cycles

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Increasing the service life of forging tools improves the economic efficiency of forging production. Due to high cyclical loads, the forging die is subjected to high normal and shear stresses. This results in micro-deformations and clusterig of dislocations at grain boundaries and inclusions, followed by near-surface crack formation, which propagates with each forging cycle [2]. The number of load bearing cycles is decisive for the efficiency of a forging process and defines the tool’s service life [3]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call