Author:
Karadogan Celalettin,Görz Marcel,Liewald Mathias,Bühler Marco
Abstract
Abstract
Optical measuring systems allow to observe the sheet metal instability more precisely. The section method was first standardised and made available in commercial measurement systems in order to evaluate the forming limit curves almost automatically. The insignificant contribution of the necking area to the evaluated critical strains compared to the neighbouring volume of material led to alternative approaches such as the time-based evaluation criteria. The majority of these criteria take into account the strain evolution at the material necking location and are also suitable for evaluating other types of limits such as edge-crack sensitivity. Some advanced high-strength steels typically exhibit very short deformation after the onset of instability, which complicates the application of time-based approaches because they require sufficient amount of deformation after necking. The proposed approach is an attempt to reduce the dependence of the time-based approaches on the amount of deformation after necking by taking into account the local characteristics of the measurement curves. The approach is applied to some advanced high-strength steels to evaluate the forming instability and edge-crack sensitivity. The superiority of this identification approach is demonstrated in this paper by comparison with classical time-based approaches.