Title: Mechanical and Other Methods of Change of Form
1Mechanical and Other Methods of Change of Form
2- Competencies
- Define Forging
- Describe the fundamental characteristics of
extrusion - Describe the process of Coining and Heading
- Describe the reasons for using lubrication in
forging - Describe the fundamental characteristics of
rolling - List the common material change of form
mechanical methods
3Overview of Metal Forming
- Can be classified as
- Bulk deformation processes generally
characterized by significant deformations and
massive shape changes and the surface area-to-
volume of to work is relatively small. - Forging
- Extrusion
- Rolling
- Wire and bar drawing
- Sheet metalworking process
- Bending operations
- Deep or cup drawing
- Shearing processes
- Miscellaneous
4Forging
- Forging - plastic deformation by compressive
forces - Hand Forging exactly what the blacksmiths did.
- Drop Forging a drop forge raises a massive
weight and lets it fall. - The two basic types of forging machines are
presses and hammers. - Presses exert enormous forces, which are applied
slowly enough that the metal has time to flow. - The hammer machines are designed to raise a
massive weight and let it drop. - Power hammers add to gravity with pneumatic or
hydraulic assistance. - Counterblow hammers use two opposed hammers
5Forging
- Open Forging - Presses the billet between two
flat plates to reduce its thickness. - Cogging is a forging process that reduces the
thickness of a single BILLET by small increments.
- Closed forging - The billet is forced into the
cavities of one or more dies. - Flashing is the excess material squeezed out from
a BILLET in a CLOSED FORGING or stamping process.
6Forging
- Coining - the process used to form faces on coin
blanks. It is a very intricate process. - Heading - is the process of upsetting metal to
form heads on nails or screws. - Swaging is the forging process by which a hollow
cylindrical part is forced tightly around a rod
or wire to permanently attach the two parts. It
is also known as RADIAL FORGING.
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8Forging
- Lubricants for Forging
- improve the flow of the material into the dies
- to reduce die wear
- to control the cooling rate
- to serve as a parting agent
9Forging
- Pressures Involved in Forging
- The force needed to forge a part depends on
- the compressive strength of the metal
- the area including flashings of the metal being
forged - the temperature at which the forging is being
done - the amount of deformation each compressive stroke
of the ram or hammer performs.
10Extrusion
- Extrusion is the process of forcing a material
through a DIE to produce a very long WORKPIECE of
constant shape and cross section. Extrusion can
be done cold (at room temperature) or hot so
that the material is softened slightly.
11Extrusion
- Direct or forward - The product moves though a
die - Indirect (reverse or backward) - product
stationary, die moves - Hydrostatic Extrusion In hydrostatic extrusion
a fluid is placed between the ram and the metal
being extruded. This produces two advantages - (1) The fluid presses radially inward on the
billet, which helps guide it into the opening in
the die - (2) the fluid lubricates the walls of the
cylinder, which reduces the friction forces in
the extrusion process. - Hollow Extrusion Hollow pieces such as pipes
and tubing can be made by extrusion if some
obstacle is part of the die design.
12Rolling
- A compressive deformation process in which the
thickness of a slab or plate is reduced by two
opposing cylindrical tools called rolls. - The rolls rotate so as to draw the work into the
gap between them and squeeze it. Rollers are
pressed together with enough force so that
whatever passes between them must take the shape
of the space between the rollers.
13Rolling
- Bend rods or sheets into curved surfaces
- Change the grain structure of cast bars or sheets
- Form billets into structural shapes such as
flanges, channels, or railroad rails - Produce tapers or threads on rods
- Straighten bent sheets, rods, or tubing
14Bending by Rolling
- Crimped by rolling.
- Tube forming by rolling
- Threaded parts by rolling - faster than machining
the threads and leaves a harder grain structure. - Forming ball bearings
- Straightening flat stock
15Rolling Shapes
- Plate is defined as stock that is thicker than
0.25 inch (6 millimeters) - Sheet runs from 0.25 inch down to about 0.0003
inch (0.008 millimeter) - Foil is considered to be less than 0.0003 inch
thick. - Large flange beams (I-beams), channels, and even
wire are made by rolling.
16Hot Versus Cold Rolling
- Hot rolling Billets heated to the red hot range
rapidly form an oxide coating or scale. - Cold rolling - Softer materials such as aluminum
and copper are cold rolled. - rolling material at room temperature provides
better surface finish and closer tolerances - characterized by fine grain size. The finer the
grain, the harder and less malleable the metal
becomes.
17Factors Affecting Rolling
- The material being rolled
- The material of the rollers
- The shape being rolled
- The size of the stock being rolled
- The size of the rollers
- Power requirements
18Drawing
- The pulling of a bar through a Die to reduce the
cross section. - Used to make wire
- Seamless Tubing
19Sheet metalworking Processes
- Bending
- Brake general use device for bending sheet
metal. - Punch and Dies shaping material by punching it
into a die. Punch is the moving form, Die is the
stationary form. - Press brake - an extension of the punch-and-die
set extended along one dimension to make complex
bends in a long piece of sheet stock.
20Sheet Metalworking Processes
- Drawing - in sheet metal working, drawing refers
to the forming of a flat metal sheet into a
hollow or concave shape, such as a cup, by
stretching the metal. - Spin forming - A forming process in which a sheet
of metal is held to a mandrel, rotated, and
forced onto the mandrel to shape the sheet. - Miscellaneous stretch forming, roll bending,
spinning, and bending of tube stock
21Spin forming
22Material Properties
- Tensile
- Compression
- Shear
23Tensile
- The stress-strain relationship has two regions,
indicating two distinct forms of behavior
elastic and plastic. - In the elastic region, the relationship between
stress and strain is linear, and the material
exhibits elastic behavior by returning to its
original length when the load is released. This
relationship is defined by Hookes Law - se E ?
- where E modulus of elasticity (psi) which is
the inherent stiffness of a material e
engineering strain
24Tensile Stress Strain Curve
- As stress increases, some point in the linear
relationship is finally reached at which the
material begins to yield (yield point Y) Often
referred to as the yield strength, yield stress
and elastic limit. - Beyond this point, Hookes Law does not apply.
As the elongation increases at a much faster
rate, this causes the slope of the curve to
change dramatically. - Finally, the applied load F reaches maximum
value, and the engineering stress calculated at
this point is called the tensile strength or
ultimate tensile strength of the material.
25Tensile Stress Strain Curve
- The amount of strain that the material can endure
before failure is also a mechanical property of
interest in many manufacturing processes. The
common measure of this property if ductility, the
ability of a material to plastically strain
without fracture.
26Tensile Stress Strain Curve
- This measure can be taken as either elongation or
area reduction - Elongation often expressed as a percent.
- where Lf specimen length after fracture and Lo
original specimen length
27Tensile Stress Strain Curve
- Area reduction often expressed as a percent
- where Ao original area and Af area of the
cross-section at the point of fracture
28True Stress-Strain
- There is a small problem with using the original
area of the material the calculate engineering
stress, rather than the actual (instantaneous)
area that becomes increasing smaller as the test
proceeds.
29True Stress-Strain
- If the actual area were used, the calculated
stress value would be higher. The stress value
obtained by dividing the instantaneous value of
area into the applied load is defined as the true
stress - Where F force (lb) and A actual
(instantaneous) area resisting the load
30True Stress-Strain
- Similarly, true strain provides a more realistic
assessment of the instantaneous elongation per
unit length of the material.
31True Stress-Strain
- The value of true stain in a tensile test can be
estimated by dividing the total elongation into
small increments, calculating the engineering
strain for each increment on the basis of its
starting length, and then adding up the strain
values, in the limit, true strain is defined as - Where L instantaneous length at any moment
during elongation
32True Stress-Strain
- At this point if the engineering stress-strain
curve is replotted using the true stress-strain,
then we would see very little difference in the
elastic region. - The difference occurs at the point in which the
stress-strain exceeds the yield point and enters
the plastic region. - The true stress-strain values are high due to a
smaller cross sectional area being used, which is
continuously reduced during elongation. - As in the engineering stress-strain curve,
necking occurs and therefore a downturn leading
to fracture.
33True Stress-Strain
- Unlike engineering stress-strain, true stress
values indicate that the material is actually
becoming stronger as strain increases. - This property is called strain hardening. Stain
hardening (work hardening) is an important factor
in certain manufacturing processes, particularly
metal forming.
34True Stress-Strain
- By replotting the plastic region of the true
stress curve on a Log/Log scale, the result is a
linear relationship expressed as - Known as the flow curve which captures a good
approximation of the behavior of metals in the
plastic region, including their capacity for
strain hardening - Where K strength coefficient (psi) it equals
the value of true stress at a true strain value
equal to one. - n strain hardening exponent, and is the slope
of the line. Its value is directly related to a
metals tendency to work harden
35True Stress-Strain
- Empirical evident reveals that necking begins for
a particular metal when the true strain reaches a
value equal to the strain hardening exponent. - Therefore, a higher n value means that the metal
can be strained further before the onset of
necking
36Types of Stress-Strain relationships
- Perfectly elastic
- the behavior of this material is defined
completely by its stiffness, indicated by the
modulus of elasticity E. It fractures rather
than yielding to plastic flow. - Brittle material such as ceramics, many cast
irons, and thermosetting polymers possess
stress-strain curves that fall into this
category. - These material are not good candidates for
forming operations.
37Types of Stress-Strain relationships
- Elastic and perfectly plastic
- This material has a stiffness defined by E. Once
the yield strength Y is reached, the material
deforms plastically at the same stress level. - The flow curve is given by K Y and n 0.
Metals behave in this fashion when they have been
heated to sufficiently high temperatures that
they recrystallize rather than strain harden
during deformation. - Lead exhibits this behavior at room temperature
because room temperature is above the
recrystallization point for lead.
38Types of Stress-Strain relationships
- Elastic and strain hardening
- This material obeys Hookes Law in the elastic
region. - It begins to flow at its yield strength Y.
Continued deformation requires an
every-increasing stress, given by a flow curve
whose strength coefficient K is greater that Y
and whose strain hardening exponent n is greater
than zero. - The flow curve is generally represented as a
linear function on a natural logarithmic plot. - Most ductile metals behave this way when cold
worked.
39Tensile
- Manufacturing processes that deform materials
through the application of tensile stresses
include wire and bar drawing and stretch forming
40Compression Properties
- Applies a load that squeezes a cylindrical
specimen between two platens. The specimen
height is reduced and its cross-sectional area is
increased. - Engineering stress and strain are calculated much
like that in tensile engineering stress and
strain. - The engineering stress strain curve is different
in plastic portion of the curve. Since
compression causes the cross section to increase,
the load increases more rapidly than previously.
The result is a higher calculated engineering
stress.
41Compression Properties
- Although differences exist between the
engineering stress-strain curve in tension and
compression, when the respective data are plotted
as true stress-strain, the relationships are
nearly identical - Important compression processes in industry
include rolling, forging, and extrusion
42Shearing Properties
- Shear involves application of stresses in
opposite directions on either side of a thin
element to deflect it. - Shear stress (psi) is defined by
- Shear strain (in/in) is defined by
Where d is the deflection of the element (in) and
b the orthogonal distance over which deflection
occurs
43Shearing Properties
- Shear stress and strain are commonly tested in a
torsion test, in which a thin-walled tubular
specimen is subjected to a torque. - As torque is increased, the tube deflects by
twisting, which is a shear strain for this
geometry.
44Shearing Properties
- The shear stress can be determined in the test by
the equation - Where T applied torque (lb-in) R radius of
the tube measured from the neutral axis of the
wall (in) t wall thickness (in)
45Shearing Properties
- Shear strain can be determined by measuring the
amount of angular deflection of the tube,
converting this into a distance, and dividing by
the gauge length (L). Reducing this to a simple
expression. - The shear stress at fracture can be calculated,
and this is used as the shear strength S of the
material. Shear strength can be estimated from
tensile strength data by approximation S 0.7(TS)
Where a the angular deflection (radians)