Abstract

Commercially pure titanium sheets have been widely used in various industrial applications owing to their lightweight nature, superior formability, and excellent corrosion resistance. Previous studies showed that accurate modelling of material characteristics, such as anisotropic yield function and hardening, is essential for the simulation of sheet metal forming with titanium sheets. For example, the non-quadratic anisotropic yield function Yld2000-2d and the modified Kim–Tuan hardening model were used to model initial anisotropy and reproduce flow stress curves at large strains. However, even with these advanced constitutive models for describing the anisotropic behavior of sheet metals, further improvement is necessary to simulate anisotropy evolution, or distortional hardening, in pure titanium sheets. In this study, distortional hardening was experimentally measured under both uniaxial and balanced biaxial loading conditions. Moreover, the evolution of the Yld2000-2d function was modelled as a function of equivalent plastic work. For validation, the developed material models were applied in finite element simulations to analyse deformation behavior in uniaxial tension, hydraulic bulge, and punch-stretching tests. It was confirmed that this approach accurately described material response during these three tests.

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