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Materials & Design

Publication date: 2017-05-01
Volume: 130 Pages: 336 - 348
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd

Author:

Coppieters, Sam
Zhang, Hao ; Fan, Xu ; Vandermeiren, Nelis ; Breda, Andreas ; Debruyne, Dimitri

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Technology, Materials Science, Multidisciplinary, Materials Science, Clinching, Damage, Process-induced defects, Limited ductility, Clinch forming, Fatigue life, MODIFIED ROUSSELIER MODEL, ALUMINUM-ALLOY SHEETS, HIGH-STRENGTH STEEL, MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES, DUCTILE FRACTURE, FAILURE BEHAVIOR, METALLIC SHEETS, JOINT, MAGNESIUM, IDENTIFICATION, 0910 Manufacturing Engineering, 0912 Materials Engineering, 0913 Mechanical Engineering, Materials, 4016 Materials engineering, 4017 Mechanical engineering

Abstract:

© 2017 Elsevier Ltd Lightweight and high strength sheet metal such as aluminum alloy sheets are used in a variety of industrial applications. Due to the limited weldability of these materials, mechanical joining techniques such as clinching are of interest. The challenge in this regard is that conventional round clinch forming locally induces large plastic deformations which potentially cannot be accommodated by materials with limited ductility. Ductile damage models are used to predict the occurrence of bottom cracks during conventional round clinch forming of EN AW-6082 T6 sheet. It is shown that cracks in the bottom of a clinched joint and the final static strength of a single lap shear specimen can be numerically reproduced provided that the post-necking strain hardening behavior and damage behavior of the base material are properly identified. The observed bottom cracks did not have a detrimental effect on the static strength and fatigue life of single shear lap specimens. It is hypothesized that fatigue cracks in single shear lap tests initiate due to fretting.