Ductile damage modeling of the machining process
Doctoral thesis, 2019

Machining processes are among the most common manufacturing processes for producing components used on a daily basis. It is a complex material removal process. Today, the research and development within the manufacturing industry is addressed by cost efficient numerical simulation strategies rather than by costly experimental procedures. The numerical simulation tools must then be able to model material subjected to inelastic deformations at high strain-rates and elevated temperatures and use reliable and well defined models for ductile material behavior and fracture.
  The development of the modeling strategy, for the ductile material and fracture response herein, is embedded in a continuum thermodynamics framework. The Johnson-Cook constitutive model is applied for the effective visco-plastic material response. The ductile fracture behavior, is modelled by a continuum damage enhanced material formulation where an inelastic damage threshold is followed by a damage evolution law. A set of smeared damage evolution models are proposed, which are shown to give mesh independent results for quasi-static and isothermal conditions.
  In addition, for more general situations, an alternative continuum progressive ductile damage model coupled to thermodynamics is formulated, where the damage induced fracture area production is based on a progression speed and a length-scale parameter. The damage evolution is then governed by a damage driving energy which, defined from the dissipation rate, consists of both elastic and inelastic contributions. In this way, the model is able to represent the ductile fracture process in a thermodynamically consistent way at high strain-rates and elevated temperatures, while partly preserving the mesh independent response. Moreover, the ability of the model to capture the material and fracture response at various states of stress triaxiality is investigated and results are compared with experiments. The damage model is shown to be able to capture the fracture response with the appropriate formulation of the damage driving energy including at least the inelastic part.
  Finally, the continuum progressive ductile damage model is applied in a rigid visco-plastic context for the simulation of the orthogonal machining process. Here, simulation results for the difficult-to-cut material Alloy 718 are compared with experimentally determined forces, tool-chip contact-lengths and chip shapes at varying cutting speeds. Even though the proposed damage model consists of few parameters it is able to represent the cutting parameters considered in good agreement with experiments.

Mesh dependence

Johnson-Cook

Ductile fracture

Thermodynamics

Machining simulation

Damage driving energy

Damage evolution

Damage threshold criterion

Virtual Development Laboratory (VDL)
Opponent: Professor Jörn Mosler, Department of Mechanical Engineering, TU Dortmund, Germany

Author

SENAD RAZANICA

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Material and Computational Mechanics

Mesh objective continuum damage models for ductile fracture

International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering,; Vol. 106(2016)p. 840-860

Journal article

A ductile fracture model based on continuum thermodynamics and damage

Mechanics of Materials,; Vol. 139(2019)

Journal article

Validation of the ductile fracture modeling of CGI at quasi-static loading conditions

International Journal of Damage Mechanics,; Vol. 30(2021)p. 1400-1422

Journal article

FE modeling and simulation of machining Alloy 718 based on ductile continuum damage

International Journal of Mechanical Sciences,; Vol. 171(2020)

Journal article

Machining is a collective term for various material removal processes comprising e.g. turning, milling and grinding. These are among the most common manufacturing processes for producing component and products used on a daily basis. As a matter of fact, machining is often applied as a final step in the production line in order to reach correct workpiece dimensions, surface finish and shape, with close tolerance accuracy thus accounting for approximately 15 % of the value of all mechanical components worldwide.
  During a turning operation, the topic of the current thesis, a material portion called “chip” is removed from the workpiece using a cutting tool. A considerable waste of material, up to 10 % of the workpiece material might be removed in order to reach the final geometrical dimensions of the product. Desired product properties are achieved by controlling the processing parameters e.g. cutting forces, chip morphology, temperature and surface roughness which may be a difficult task.
  Currently, the manufacturing industry addresses these challenges via simulation tools to increase the knowledge and optimization possibilities of the operation. Hence, in order to accurately simulate the machining processes, it is of utmost importance to accurately represent the behavior of the workpiece material, the interaction at the tool-chip interface and the local fracturing that occur during the chip formation. During this material removal process, regions of the workpiece material are subjected complex phenomena e.g. extremely large deformations, high strains and strain-rates together with elevated temperatures.
  Thus, in the current thesis, a modeling framework is presented which accounts for both the material response, tool-chip interaction and fracture in the workpiece during machining. In particular main efforts have been put on the development of a model to represent the onset and evolution of damage followed by subsequent fracture. The modeling framework is implemented in a commercial software to simulate 2D machining (orthogonal cutting). The results obtained are validated against experimentally obtained chip formations, cutting forces and tool-chip contact lengths for machining of the difficult-to-cut material, Alloy 718.

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Materials Engineering

Applied Mechanics

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Production

Materials Science

Roots

Basic sciences

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

ISBN

978-91-7597-884-0

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 4565

Publisher

Chalmers

Virtual Development Laboratory (VDL)

Opponent: Professor Jörn Mosler, Department of Mechanical Engineering, TU Dortmund, Germany

More information

Latest update

5/20/2021