Abstract

In this study, the rheological characteristics of a titanium alloy have been obtained by multi-dome bulging test. Free bulging process is an experimental technique that can be used to characterize material in conditions of biaxial tension during superplastic, as well as conventional, hot forming. The constitutive constants are calculated on a base of the information about the bulge geometry, applied pressure, and forming time. A multi-dome forming test allows one to reduce the number of the experiments required for the characterization, since every multi-dome test produces several domes of different size. In this study, a specific die for multi-dome test was used. The die has six holes with different radiuses of 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, and 45 mm. During a test, the specimen is clamped between blank holder and die holder, heated to a specific temperature, and formed by applying constant gas pressure. The experiments were conducted at different temperatures for OT4-1 titanium alloy. The constitutive constants were obtained by processing the experimental data using two different techniques and compared with tensile test results. In order to estimate the influence of friction on the experimental results and to verify obtained material characteristics, finite element (FE) simulation was performed. Finally, the results of FE simulation were compared with the experimental data. The results of the simulation show the advantage of material characterization based on multi dome tests and its interpretation by inverse analysis. The deviations produced by the effect of friction are more significant when the direct approach is applied instead of inverse analysis with a semi analytical model of the bulging process.

Highlights

  • The characterization of material rheological behavior plays a significant role while the development of forming technologies

  • The constitutive constants obtained by different methods were verified by finite element (FE)

  • The constitutive constants obtained by different methods were verified by finite elementof(FE)

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Summary

Introduction

The characterization of material rheological behavior plays a significant role while the development of forming technologies. The comparison of material characteristics obtained by free bulging and tensile tests for aluminum based alloys is presented in [6,7,8,9]. Multi-dome forming technique was first presented by El-Morsy [8] and implemented to obtain superplastic characteristics of titanium and aluminum alloys. The experiments were conducted at different temperatures and forming pressures in order to find the optimum forming conditions of 7075 Al alloy In all these papers, the results of the tests were interpreted using very simple direct methods. The results were compared with the ones obtained by the direct method in order to study how the interpretation technique could affect the predicted values of the constitutive constants. The Backofen constitutive constants were obtained for titanium alloy OT4-1 both by tensile testing and multi-dome bulging testing

Material
Tensile Testing
Multi-Dome
A sheet specimen
Results
Finite Element Verification
TableThe
Deviation between experimental data and FE coefficient values
Conclusions
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