McPhillimy Michael, Yakushina Evgenia, Blackwell Paul
Department of Design, Manufacturing & Engineering Management, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow G1 1XJ, Scotland, UK.
Advanced Forming Research Centre, Inchinnan PA4 9LJ, Scotland, UK.
Materials (Basel). 2022 Aug 30;15(17):5985. doi: 10.3390/ma15175985.
Typically, due to their limited formability, elevated temperatures are required in order to achieve complex shapes in titanium alloys. However, there are opportunities for forming such alloys at room temperature using incremental forming processes such as single-point incremental forming (SPIF). SPIF is an innovative metal forming technology which uses a single tool to form sheet parts in place of dedicated dies. SPIFs ability to increase the forming limits of difficult-to-form materials offers an alternative to high temperature processing of titanium. However, sheet thinning during SPIF may encourage the early onset of fracture, compromising in-service performance. An additive step prior to SPIF has been examined to tailor the initial sheet thickness to achieve a homogeneous thickness distribution in the final part. In the present research, laser metal deposition (LMD) was used to locally thicken a commercially pure titanium grade 2 (CP-Ti50A) sheet. Tensile testing was used to examine the mechanical behaviour of the tailored material. In addition, in-situ digital image correlation was used to measure the strain distribution across the surface of the tailored material. The work found that following deposition, isotropic mechanical properties were obtained within the sheet plane in contrast to the anisotropic properties of the as-received material and build height appeared to have little influence on strength. Microstructural analysis showed a change to the material in response to the LMD added thickness, with a heat affected zone (HAZ) at the interface between the added LMD layer and non-transformed substrate material. Grain growth and intragranular misorientation in the added LMD material was observed. SPIF of a LMD tailored preform resulted in improved thickness homogeneity across the formed part, with the downside of early fracture in a high wall angle section of the sheet.
通常情况下,由于钛合金的可成形性有限,需要升高温度才能实现复杂形状。然而,利用诸如单点增量成形(SPIF)等增量成形工艺,在室温下成形此类合金是有可能的。SPIF是一种创新的金属成形技术,它使用单个工具来成形板材零件,取代了专用模具。SPIF提高难成形材料成形极限的能力为钛合金的高温加工提供了一种替代方案。然而,SPIF过程中的板材变薄可能会促使裂纹过早出现,从而影响其服役性能。在SPIF之前增加一个附加步骤,以调整初始板材厚度,从而在最终零件中实现均匀的厚度分布。在本研究中,采用激光金属沉积(LMD)对商业纯钛2级(CP-Ti50A)板材进行局部增厚。通过拉伸试验来研究定制材料的力学行为。此外,利用原位数字图像相关技术来测量定制材料表面的应变分布。研究发现,沉积后,板材平面内获得了各向同性的力学性能,这与原始材料的各向异性性能形成对比,并且堆积高度似乎对强度影响不大。微观结构分析表明,材料因LMD增加的厚度而发生了变化,在添加的LMD层与未转变的基体材料之间的界面处存在热影响区(HAZ)。观察到添加的LMD材料中存在晶粒生长和晶内取向差。对LMD定制预制件进行SPIF后,成形零件的厚度均匀性得到改善,但板材高壁角部分出现了早期断裂的问题。