Abstract

Lightweight designs and demanding safety requirements in automotive industry are increasingly promoting the use of Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS) sheets. Such steels present higher strength (above 800 MPa) but lower ductility than conventional steels. Their great properties allow the reduction of the thickness of automobile structural components without compromising the safety, but also introduce new challenges to parts manufacturers. The fabrication of most cold formed components starts from shear cut blanks and, due to the lower ductility of AHSS, edge cracking problems can appear during forming operations, forcing the stop of the production and slowing down the industrial process.Forming Limit Diagrams (FLD) and FEM simulations are very useful tools to predict fracture problems in zones with high localized strain, but they are not able to predict edge cracking. It has been observed that the fracture toughness, measured through the Essential Work of Fracture (EWF) methodology, is a good indicator of the stretch flangeability in AHSS and can help to foresee this type of fractures.In this work, a serial production automotive component has been studied. The component showed cracks in some flanged edges when using a dual phase steel. It is shown that the conventional approach to explain formability, based on tensile tests and FLD, fails in the prediction of edge cracking. A new approach, based on fracture mechanics, help to solve the problem by selecting steel grades with higher fracture toughness, measured by means of EWF. Results confirmed that fracture toughness, in terms of EWF, can be readily used as a material parameter to rationalize cracking related problems and select AHSS with improved edge cracking resistance.

Highlights

  • Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS) present excellent mechanical properties that poses them as a great option for safety components, structural parts of the car body and chassis, reducing the total vehicle mass and enhancing crashworthiness

  • Lightweight designs and demanding safety requirements in automotive industry are increasingly promoting the use of Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS) sheets

  • Engineering stress-strain curves obtained from tensile tests are shown in figure 4a and tensile parameters are summarized in table 2

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Summary

Introduction

AHSS present excellent mechanical properties that poses them as a great option for safety components, structural parts of the car body and chassis, reducing the total vehicle mass and enhancing crashworthiness Their use in the automotive industry has been strongly extended in the last two decades in order to fulfill the more and more demanding safety and fuel consumption legislations [1].

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