Abstract

A hot-working die steel thick-walled tube Pilger rolling test was carried out using an LG40 Pilger mill, and the morphology and roughness evolution of the inner surface were examined using a white-light interferometer. The experimental results showed that micro-wrinkles formed on the basis of the original inner surface morphology, the altitude difference (Sz) between the peaks and valleys of the inner surface profile increased from 3.18 to 3.686 μm, and Sa increased from 0.722 to 0.892 μm in the diameter reduction zone. As the tube continued to feed into the wall thickness reduction zone, the micro-wrinkles gradually flattened, Sz and Sa were decreased to 1.625 and 0.174 respectively, and Sa maintained a slight fluctuation of 0.174~0.2 μm in the final sizing zone. From the diameters of the roller groove and taper of the mandrel, the three-dimensional strain of the tube in the wall thickness reduction zone was calculated, and the strain state of the tube in the complete deformation zone could be analyzed by finite element simulations. We found that in the diameter reduction zone, the inner surface was not supported by the mandrel and was free, while micro-wrinkles formed under circumferential compressive strain. In the wall thickness reduction zone, the deformation of the inner surface was controlled by the mandrel, and the micro-wrinkles were gradually flattened by radial compressive strain. The ratio of radial to circumferential strain was the key to flattening the micro-wrinkles, and when the ratio increased, the inner surface roughness (Sa) was reduced to 0.174 μm. In the sizing zone, the radial and circumferential strains were small, and the inner surface roughness showed no obvious fluctuation.

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