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Title: high emergy rate


1
SEMINAR ON HIGH ENERGY RATE FORMING
THAPAR UNIVERSITY, PATIALA Delivered
to Delivered by ER. VINOD KUMAR
SINGLA RUPESH KAUSHIK (Sr. Lecturer) M.E.
(P IE) 1st Year (Mechanical Engg. Deptt.
) 800882007
2
INTRODUCTION
  • High-energy rate forming (HERF) refers to process
    that form parts at very high velocities and
    extremely high pressure. A more accurate name for
    process might be high velocity forming because
    the most distinguishing feature is the high
    forming velocity rather than the expenditure of
    large quantities of energy. All the HERF
    processes involve a short, sharp, forming energy
    input usually microsecond duration.
  • The energy level employed in HERF very widely
    depending upon the requirement of application.
    Generally speaking, HERF process makes use of
    short burst of energy that is transmitted to the
    part surface through a medium such as water or
    air. The resulting force or shockwave acts to
    force the part into a die cavity that has the
    desired shape of finished part. Forcing the part
    into a die in this manner drastically reduces die
    cost because the need for a male die is
    completely eliminated.

3
INTRODUCTION
  • Materials being formed at a very high velocity
    behave almost like a fluid they can be formed
    beyond their usual limits and maintain excellent
    dimensional control. HERF will typically improve
    material proprieties by improving the ultimate
    tensile strength and producing a more uniform
    strain throughout the part.
  • Three processes are prominent in the HERF family
    they are
  • Electromagnetic forming
  • Explosive forming
  • Electrohydraulic forming

4
Why need this type of system
Process Velocity m/sec
Hydraulic press 0.03
Brake press 0.03
Mechanical press 0.03-0.73
Drop hammer 0.24-4.2
Gas-actuated ram 2.4-82
Explosive (HERF) 9-228
Magnetic (HERF) 27-228
Electrohydraulic (HERF) 27-228
  • Approximate deformation velocity

5
1) Electromagnetic forming
  • Electromagnetic forming (EM forming or
    Magneforming) is a high energy rate metal forming
    process that uses pulsed power techniques to
    create ultrastrong pulsed magnetic fields to
    rapidly reshape metal parts.
  • In practice the metal "work piece" to be
    fabricated is placed in close proximity to a
    heavily constructed coil of wire (called the work
    coil). A huge pulse of current is forced through
    the work coil by rapidly discharging a high
    voltage capacitor bank using an ignitron or a
    spark gap as a switch. This creates a rapidly
    oscillating, ultrastrong electromagnetic field
    around the work coil.
  • The rapidly changing magnetic field induces a
    circulating electrical current within the work
    piece through electromagnetic induction, and the
    induced current creates a corresponding magnetic
    field around the metal work piece. Because of
    Lenz's Law, the magnetic fields created within
    the metal work piece and work coil strongly repel
    each another.

6
1) ELECTROMAGNETIC FORMING
  • The high work coil current (typically tens or
    hundreds of thousands of amperes) creates
    ultrastrong magnetic forces that easily overcome
    the yield strength of the metal work piece,
    causing permanent deformation. The metal forming
    process occurs extremely quickly (typically tens
    of microseconds). The forming process is most
    often used to shrink or expand cylindrical
    tubing, but it can also form sheet metal by
    repelling the work piece onto a shaped die at a
    high velocity.
  • Since the forming operation involves high
    acceleration and decelleration, inertia of the
    work piece plays a critical role during the
    forming process. The process works best with good
    electrical conductors such as copper or aluminum,
    but it can be adapted to work with poorer
    conductors such as steel.

7
Working of electromagnetic forming
  • Electromagnetic forming is based on something
    called the Lorentz force. Basically whenever an
    electrical current is rapidly imposed within an
    electrical conductor, it will develop a magnetic
    field. This change in magnetic field will induce
    eddy currents in any nearby conductor that
    generally run in a direction opposite to the
    primary current (like in a transformer). These
    eddy currents develop their own magnetic field
    and cause a mutual repulsion between the
    workpiece and actuator. This technique is quite
    general and is suitable for any workpiece made
    from a good conductor provided the current pulse
    is of a sufficiently high frequency.

8
Working of electromagnetic forming
9
Arrangement in electromagnetic forming
10
Manufacturing part with the help of
electromagnetic forming
11
Design with the help of electromagnetic forming
12
Manufacturing of rings
13
Application
  • Used by automotive industries to form and
    simultaneously swage copper rings around rubber
    seal in ball joint assembly
  • Retaining band into oil filter
  • Repair dents
  • Making aircraft part.

14
Advantages
  • Only one die require
  • No requirement of part lubrication
  • Easily automated with high rates
  • Applicable to high volume production

15
Disadvantages
  • Coil placement sometime limits configuration
  • Electromagnetic forming can be used to form
    light-gauge metal into shapes up to 300mm.
  • Capital cost is potentially very high

16
2) Explosive forming
  • Explosive forming was used in the 1960s for
    aerospace applications, such as the chine plates
    reconnaissance plane and various Soviet rocket
    parts it continued to be developed in Russia.
    Explosive forming was also applied in the 1960's
    in the USA for aerospace and space applications.
  • It is a metalworking technique in which an
    explosive charge is used instead of a punch or
    press. It can be used on materials for which a
    press setup would be prohibitively large or
    require an unreasonably high pressure, and is
    generally much cheaper than building a large
    enough and sufficiently high-pressure press on
    the other hand, it is unavoidably a batch
    process, producing one product at a time.

17
2) Explosive forming
  • There are various approaches one is to place
    metal plate over a die, with the intervening
    space evacuated by a vacuum pump, place the whole
    assembly underwater and detonate a charge at an
    appropriate height above the plate. For
    complicated shapes, a segmented die can be used
    to produce in a single operation a shape that
    would require many manufacturing steps, or to be
    manufactured in parts. There is often some degree
    of work hardening from the explosive-forming
    process, particularly in mild steel.
  • Explosive forming has evolved as one of the most
    dramatic of the new metalworking techniques.
    Explosive forming is employed in Aerospace and
    aircraft industries and has been successfully
    employed in the production of automotive-related
    components. Explosive Forming or HERF (High
    Energy Rate Forming) can be utilised to form a
    wide variety of metals, from Aluminium to high
    strength alloys. In this process the punch is
    replaced by an explosive charge.

18
2) Explosive forming
  • The process derives its name from the fact that
    the energy liberated due to the detonation of an
    explosive is used to form the desired
    configuration. The charge used is very small, but
    is capable of exerting tremendous forces on the
    workpiece. In Explosive Forming chemical energy
    from the explosives is used to generate shock
    waves through a medium  (mostly water), which are
    directed to deform the workpiece at very high
    velocities.

19
Methods of Explosive Forming
  • Explosive Forming Operations can be divided into
    two groups, depending on the position of the
    explosive charge relative to the workpiece.
  • Standoff Method
  • In this method, the explosive charge is located
    at some predetermined distance from the workpiece
    and the energy is transmitted through an
    intervening medium like air, oil, or water. Peak
    pressure at the workpiece may range from a few
    thousand psi (pounds/inch2) to several hundred
    thousand psi depending on the parameters of the
    operation.
  • Contact Method
  • In this method, the explosive charge is held in
    direct contact with the workpiece while the
    detonation is initiated. The detonation produces
    interface pressures on the surface of the metal
    up to several million psi (35000 MPa).

20
Explosive Forming Set Up
21
Explosive Forming Set Up
22
Working of explosive Forming
  • The die assembly is put together on the bottom of
    the tank. Workpiece is placed on the die and
    blankholder placed above. A vacuum is then
    created in the die cavity. The explosive charge
    is placed in position over the centre of the
    workpiece. The explosive charge is suspended over
    the blank at a predetermined distance. The
    complete assembly is immersed in a tank of water.
  • After the detonation of explosive, a pressure
    pulse of high intensity is produced. A gas bubble
    is also produced which expands spherically and
    then collapses until it vents at the surface of
    the water. When the pressure pulse impinges
    against the workpiece, the metal is displaced
    into the die cavity.

23
Explosives
  • Explosives are substances that undergo rapid
    chemical reaction during which heat and large
    quantities of gaseous products are evolved.
    Explosives can be solid (TNT-trinitro toluene),
    liquid (Nitroglycerine), or Gaseous (oxygen and
    acetylene mixtures). Explosives are divide into
    two classes Low Explosives in which the burns
    rapidly rather than exploding, hence pressure
    build up is not large, and High Explosive which
    have a high rate of reaction with a large
    pressure build up. Low explosives are generally
    used as propellants in guns and in rockets for
    the propelling of missiles.

24
Features of Low and High Explosives
Property High Explosives Low Explosives
Method of initiation Primary HE-ignition, spark, flame, or impact Ignition
Conversion time Microseconds Milliseconds
Pressure up to about 4,000,000psi up to about 40,000psi
  • Time required to convert a working amount of
    high explosive into high-pressure gaseous products

25
Advantages of Explosion Forming
  • Maintains precise tolerances.
  • Eliminates costly welds.
  • Controls smoothness of contours.
  • Reduces tooling costs.
  • Less expensive alternative to super-plastic
    forming.

26
Die Materials
Material of Die Application Area
Kirksite Low pressure and few parts
Fiberglass and Kirksite Low pressure and few parts
Fiberglass and Concrete Low pressure and large parts
Epoxy and Concrete Low pressure and large parts
Ductile Iron High pressure and many parts
Concrete Medium pressure and large parts
27
Transmission Medium
  • Energy released by the explosive is transmitted
    through medium like air, water, oil, gelatin,
    liquid salts. Water is one of the best media for
    explosive forming since it is available readily,
    inexpensive and produces excellent results. The
    transmission medium is important regarding
    pressure magnitude at the workpiece. Water is
    more desirable medium than air for producing high
    peak pressures to the workpiece.

28
Explosive forming making complicated shape
29
Advantages
  • Explosive forming offers unique solutions because
    explosives can be applied in any shape and mass.
    We have no restrictions in product size, shape,
    material and thickness.Sizes range currently up
    to 10x2 meters, thicknesses from 0,3 mm aluminium
    to 60 mm stainless steel and many types of
    aluminium, titanium, stainless steel and nickel
    have been successfully formed by explosive
    forming. These ranges are not limits.
  • The shape of the blank material can be optimized
    for any product shape. Sheets can be formed from
    flat or bent condition, or from a conical or
    cylindrical shape.An extreme example of applying
    an optimized blank shape is an explosive formed
    lobe mixer. A disk is folded and explosive formed
    in a segmented die. The result is a seamless
    shape while the conventional method is to weld
    the shape from many pressed segments.

30
Advantages
  • The tooling for explosive forming is relatively
    simple. One die half is needed without a mating
    part. Low cost tooling concepts decrease costs
    further.
  • Prototypes can be delivered quickly. The tooling
    is relatively simple and can normally be
    manufactured quickly. The tooling does not need
    to be installed in a machine so that production
    can be started immediately.
  • Explosive-forming has many benefits. It employs
    lower tooling costs and uses stamping type
    applications which only require a one-sided
    tooling die. Explosive energy can be transmitted
    differently across the part, in order to
    concentrate force onto specific forming features.
    It has a large size capability and is suited to
    difficult configurations.

31
3) Electrohydraulic forming
  • Electrohydraulic forming is a type of metal
    forming in which an electric arc discharge is
    used to convert electrical energy to mechanical
    energy and change the shape of the workpiece. A
    capacitor bank delivers a pulse of high current
    across two electrodes, which are positioned a
    short distance apart while submerged in a fluid
    (water or oil). The electric arc discharge
    rapidly vaporizes the surrounding fluid creating
    a shock wave. The workpiece, which is kept in
    contact with the fluid, is deformed into an die.
  • Electrohydraulic forming is a variation of the
    older, more general, explosive forming method.
    The only fundamental difference between these two
    techniques is the energy source, and
    subsequently, the practical size of the forming
    event.

32
3) Electrohydraulic forming
  • Very large capacitor banks are needed to produce
    the same amount of energy as a modest mass of
    high explosives. This makes electrohydraulic
    forming very capital intensive for large parts.
    On the other hand, the electrohydraulic method
    was seen as better suited to automation because
    of the fine control of multiple, sequential
    energy discharges and the relative compactness of
    the electrode-media containment system.

33
Electrohydraulic forming set up
34
Electrohydraulic forming set up
35
Application
  • With proper design, electrohydraulic forming is
    capable of same performance described in
    electromagnetic forming. Used by automotive
    industries to form and simultaneously swage
    copper rings around rubber seal in ball joint
    assembly, retaining band into oil filter, for
    repair dents, for making aircraft part. However
    unlike electromagnetic forming, electrohydraulic
    forming can be performed on poor conductor and is
    typically cheaper because expensive coils do not
    have to be designed and build.

36
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