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Material characterization and fracture prediction with advanced constitutive model and Polar EPS fracture diagram for AA 3104-H19

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Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation Robert E Dick et al 2018 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 1063 012156 DOI 10.1088/1742-6596/1063/1/012156

1742-6596/1063/1/012156

Abstract

Material characterizations for plasticity and fracture have been conducted from uniaxial tensile tests, bi-axial bulge test, and disk compression test for a beverage can AA3104-H19 material. The results from the experimental tests are used to determine material coefficients for the Yld2004-18p model [1]. Finite element simulations are developed to evaluate the predicted earing profile. Excellent agreement with the experimental data for eight ears exhibited in AA3014-H19 is achieved using the Yld2004-18p constitutive model. Further mechanical tests are also conducted on the AA3104-H19 to generate fracture data under different stress triaxiality conditions. Tensile tests are performed on the samples with a central hole and notched specimens to achieve tensile and plane-strain conditions. A specially designed torsion test of a double bridge specimen is conducted to generate the points near pure shear conditions. The Nakajima test is also utilized to produce a bi-axial tension condition. The data from the experiments is used to generate the fracture locus in the principal strain space. Mapping from the principal strain space to Polar Effective Plastic Strain (PEPS) space is accomplished for a general yield function. Finite element modeling is used to validate the fracture diagram in the polar space. A hole expansion demonstrates the accuracy of the PEPS fracture theory for the direction for onset of failure.

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10.1088/1742-6596/1063/1/012156