Abstract
The mechanical anisotropy of an AA1050 aluminium plate is studied by the use of five crystal plasticity models and two advanced yield functions. In-plane uniaxial tension properties of the plate were predicted by the full-constraint Taylor model, the advanced Lamel model (Van Houtte et al., 2005) and a modified version of this model (Mánik and Holmedal, 2013), the viscoplastic self-consistent model and a crystal plasticity finite element method (CPFEM). Results are compared with data from tensile tests at every 15° from the rolling direction (RD) to the transverse direction (TD) in the plate. Furthermore, all the models, except CPFEM, were used to provide stress points in the five-dimensional deviatoric stress space at yielding for 201 plastic strain-rate directions. The Facet yield surface was calibrated using these 201 stress points and compared to in-plane yield loci and the planar anisotropy which were calculated by the crystal plasticity models. The anisotropic yield function Yld2004-18p (Barlat et al., 2005) was calibrated by three methods: using uniaxial tension data, using the 201 virtual yield points in stress space, and using a combination of experimental data and virtual yield points (i.e. a hybrid method). Optimal yield-surface exponents were found for each of the crystal plasticity models, based on calibration to calculated stress points at yielding for a random texture, and used in the latter two calibration methods. It is found that the last hybrid calibration method can capture the experimental results and at the same time ensure a good fit to the anisotropy in the full stress space predicted by the crystal plasticity models.
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