Modeling and analysis of dual hydroforming process

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dc.contributor.advisor Wang, Jyhwen en_US
dc.contributor.advisor Alexander, Richard en_US
dc.creator Jain, Nishant en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2004-09-30T01:52:14Z
dc.date.available 2004-09-30T01:52:14Z
dc.date.created 2003-12 en_US
dc.date.issued 2004-09-30T01:52:14Z
dc.identifier.uri http://handle.tamu.edu/1969.1/321
dc.description.abstract The tube hydroforming process has gained increasing attention in recent years. Coordination of the internal pressurization and axial feeding curves is critical in the tube hydroforming process to generate successful parts without fracture or wrinkling failure. The stress state at a given time and location varies with the process history and the design and control of the load paths. A new process parameter, counter-pressure, is introduced to achieve a favorable tri-axial stress state during the deformation process. The new process is referred to as dual hydroforming. The benefits offered by dual hydroforming will be characterized based upon the amount of wall thinning, plastic instability limit and final bulged configuration. An analytical model is developed to analyze the stress and strain state in the part (tube) during the dual hydroforming process. The stress-strain condition analyzed will be used to evaluate and compare thinning for tube hydroforming and dual hydroforming. The effect of applying counter-pressure on the plastic instability of thin-walled tubes with only internal pressure and combination of internal pressure and independent axial loading is considered. Finite element analysis is used to quantify the merits of dual hydroforming in terms of final bulged configuration. A parametric study has been conducted to investigate the effectiveness of dual hydroforming based on the various material properties and process conditions. Dual hydroforming results in different stress and strain states compared to tube hydroforming. The counter-pressure enabled favorable tri-axial stress state during deformation that resulted in different thickness and percentage thinning. Finite element analysis showed that for a particular amount of wall thinning there is an increase of around 8% in bulge height for dual hydroforming. Dual hydroforming delays the onset of plastic instability. This increase in the value of effective strain to failure results in an increase of around 12% in bulge height for dual hydroforming as shown by finite element simulations. Results of this study indicate that dual hydroforming can increase expansion i.e. more difficult parts can be designed and manufactured. Also, for a given part geometry, higher strength and less formable materials can be used. en_US
dc.description.provenance Made available in DSpace on 2004-09-30T01:52:14Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 etd-tamu-2003C-MEEN-Jain-1.pdf: 1628939 bytes, checksum: 70c58a570e775c5db560b7f774d615ab (MD5) en
dc.format.extent 1628939 bytes
dc.format.medium electronic en_US
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher Texas A&M University en_US
dc.subject Dual Hydroforming en_US
dc.subject Tube Hydroforming en_US
dc.subject Plastic Instability en_US
dc.title Modeling and analysis of dual hydroforming process en_US
thesis.degree.department Mechanical Engineering en_US
thesis.degree.discipline Mechanical Engineering en_US
thesis.degree.grantor Texas A&M University en_US
thesis.degree.name MS en_US
thesis.degree.level Masters en_US
dc.contributor.committeeMember Hartwig, Karl en_US
dc.type.genre Electronic Thesis en_US
dc.type.material text en_US
dc.format.digitalOrigin born digital en_US

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