Abstract

Unloading behavior is of crucial importance in metal forming, which particularly creates challenges for springback analysis and control of shape and dimensional accuracies of the manufactured components. For the working with hard-to-form materials at elevated temperatures, the thermal-mechanical coupling effect makes the unloading process more complicated and thus more difficult to model and control. Establishing an insight into the thermal-mechanical unloading behavior is crucial for ultimately improving the shape and dimensional accuracy of formed components. In this research, by using a near-alpha high-strength titanium alloy as a case study material, a series of continuous loading-unloading-reloading experiments within cold and warm forming domains were designed and conducted. Through the experiments, the complex unloading behavior, specially for the temperature-dependent degradation effect of elastic modulus and nonlinear stress-strain response, was investigated. A physically-based model was developed to reproduce the temperature-dependent nonlinear reduction effect of elastic modulus. In this model, the reversible mobile dislocation density is particularly included and represented to describe the evolving nonlinear elastic strain component upon unloading affected by both plastic strain and deformation temperature. Based on the model-based analysis, the mechanism accounting for the complex unloading nonlinearity in thermal-mechanical working was discussed and revealed from different evolutions of dislocation behaviors depending on plastic deformation and temperature.

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