Abstract

Plastic instabilities can be suppressed by imposing cyclic bending during tension to increase elongation-to-fracture (ETF) of metallic sheets. This work is a combined experimental and modeling study into the origins of the improved ETF in cyclic bending during tension facilitated by a continuous-bending-under-tension (CBT) test. Load-displacement is measured during the CBT test under an optimized combination of band depth and pull speed process parameters for aluminum alloy (AA) 6022-T4. Monotonic and load reversal response of the alloy is also characterized under strain histories that resemble the history in CBT. Electron-backscattered diffraction and neutron diffraction are employed to characterize the initial microstructure and texture evolution of the alloy after CBT and simple tension (ST). Monotonic, load reversal, and texture data are used to adjust and verify the parameters of an elasto-plastic self-consistent crystal plasticity-based finite element model for simulating CBT. Additionally, a flow stress curve based on a bulge test is used to calibrate the model to capture the large strain hardening behavior of the alloy. The model is then used to simulate the CBT test while predicting the load-displacement and texture evolution data. The model successfully reproduced the succession of spikes and plateaus during CBT validating the prediction of the extrapolated hardening. After the validation, the development of stress and strain is probed through the sheet thickness to determine the underlying profiles as well as along the sheet to elucidate the location and onset of failure axially. The model reveals the development of more strain and dislocation density at the surface then at the center of the sheet and correctly predicts the strain localizations. Comparisons of texture evolution and mechanical fields developed in ST and CBT reveal very similar mechanical states in the sheet. These results in combination with experimental results suggest that the origins of improved ETF during CBT pertain primarily to the incremental deformation structural effects and secondary to the microstructural evolution effects.

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