Project Details
Microstructure-sensitive fatigue lifetime assessment considering forming history effects
Subject Area
Primary Shaping and Reshaping Technology, Additive Manufacturing
Engineering Design, Machine Elements, Product Development
Engineering Design, Machine Elements, Product Development
Term
from 2020 to 2023
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 432053466
The accurate modelling of fatigue mechanisms is a key factor for the safe design of components under cyclic loading conditions. However, the fatigue resistance of a material is altered in the course of most manufacturing processes. Therefore, the aim of the proposal is a first-time development of a chain of models which expresses the influence of manufacturing processes on the performance of a component under cyclic loads. This newly-developed model chain can be used in and against the process chain direction. As a consequence, the overarching objective of the first phase of the project (for which the funding is now requested) is to find the best suited process parameters for a defined component fatigue performance under consideration of all manufacturing process-induced changes of the material’s mechanical properties. In the future phase of the project, the desired component performance will be translated into a required microstructural configuration to be provided by the virgin material before it enters the manufacturing process. The research proposal is based on the research hypothesis that the fatigue strength of a given component and its overall integrity is governed by the actual microstructure at its critical points. The actual microstructure results from the initial state of the component before manufacturing and evolves during manufacturing and operation stages. Actually, models are already existing for the simulation of manufacturing processes and component performance on the micro and the macro scales. These approaches will be further developed in order to tailor them for the selected demonstrator example, which will be formed by means of a process chain including solid forward extrusion (bulk metal forming) and deep rolling (incremental forming). In the course of the project, WZL will gain knowledge on the interdependencies between the process parameters and the resulting microstructure of the component based on experiments and corresponding macro-modelling. The planned comprehensive characterization of the workpiece material in initial state before forming as well as during the individual steps of the process chain will give the information for micromechanical modelling and fatigue properties validation. The contribution of IEHK will focus on bridging between the microstructural features and component fatigue properties by means of micro-modelling and simulations. Microstructure-sensitive fatigue modelling approaches will be applied throughout the individual steps of the manufacturing process, which are identified by boundary conditions resulting from macro-simulations performed by WZL. In particular, the simulations with the numerically defined loading profiles of WZL will establish the data on residual stresses after forming. The microstructure-sensitive fatigue simulations under cyclic tension-compression conditions will give the information on how the fatigue strength of the component develops along the process chain.
DFG Programme
Research Grants