Abstract

This study presents a one-surface plasticity constitutive model combined with phenomenological and micromechanical damage models to be applied to the large plastic deformation during tube hydroforming. These factors lead to simulating the Bauschinger effect and transient behavior in large plastic strain ranges and predicting fracture onset. By using the integration approach, a numerical integration algorithm of implementation by explicit schemes was carried out. A comparison of several cyclic loading tests between experiments and numerical simulation was accomplished. The accuracy of these models is verified, which could be expanded to a large strain range forming process. Adopting the proposed models, finite element modeling is performed in the tube hydroforming process. The simulation and experimental results comparison showed that the proposed framework accurately predicted the tube formability in the hydroforming process.

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