Abstract

In this paper, failure limits of aluminum AA5052 sheet material were experimentally investigated, and subsequently, these were predicted using various uncoupled ductile fracture models. In this context, three different sets of experiments, namely two-stage stretch forming, two-stage deep drawing, and single point incremental forming experiments, were performed to estimate the failure limits under several different strain paths. Both the isotropic von Mises and anisotropic Barlat Yld2000 yield criteria were used to calibrate eight different fracture models, and found that incorporating an anisotropic model enhanced the accuracy of prediction for most of the fracture models. Moreover, it was identified that the incorporation of anisotropic yield theory in the Bao-Wierzbicki (BW) fracture model predicted the experimental fracture surface strains precisely for as-received sheet materials. This BW model-based fracture forming limit diagram (BW-FFLD) was transposed into a path-independent polar effective plastic strain (PEPS) locus to estimate the onset of fracture during two-stage forming experiments. Furthermore, the BW model was incorporated as a fracture initiation model in the finite element (FE) software, LS-Dyna, using the generalized incremental stress state dependent damage model (GISSMO) platform to predict the fracture location and dome height through the element erosion technique. It was observed that the dome height and cup height were predicted within 7 % and 5 % error margins in the FE simulation of two-stage stretch forming and deep drawing experiments, respectively. Furthermore, the damage evolution contour indicated that the accumulation of the damage value was rapid, which was responsible for the massive drop in the dome and cup heights during two-stage stretch forming and deep drawing experiments.

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