Reduction of Residual Stresses in Cold Drawn Pearlitic Steel by a Soft Secondary Wire Diameter Reduction

Author:

Toribio Jesús1ORCID,Lorenzo Miguel1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fracture & Structural Integrity Research Group, University of Salamanca, E.P.S., Campus Viriato, Avda. Requejo 33, 49002 Zamora, Spain

Abstract

In this paper, the effects of the skin pass technique on the residual stress and plastic strain fields generated in cold drawn pearlitic steel wires are analyzed. The aim is to find out the optimal conditions to be used in the design of a manufacturing process for obtaining more reliable structural components in terms of the main cause of failure: the hydrogen embrittlement (HE). To achieve this goal, diverse numerical simulations were performed by using finite elements (FE) and considering, on one hand, the first step of a real cold drawing chain, using (i) a conventional drawing die and (ii) modified drawing dies with different soft diameter reductions, and, on the other hand, numerical simulations by FE of the hydrogen diffusion assisted by stress and strain states to estimate the hydrogen distributions. Obtained results revealed the secondary reduction degree as a key parameter in the die design for reducing the drawing-induced residual stress. According to the results, low values of the reduction ratio cause radial distributions of residual stress with significant reductions at both the wire core and at the wire surface. In addition, the hydrogen accumulation at the prospective damage zone (near the wire surface) given by FE simulations is lower in the wires drawn with modified drawing dies including a skin pass zone.

Funder

Ministry for Science and Technology

Ministry for Education and Science

Ministry for Science and Innovation

Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness

Junta de Castilla y León

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Materials Science,Metals and Alloys

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