Dual phase titanium alloy hot forging process design: experiments and numerical modeling

A. Ducato , G. Buffa , L. Fratini , R. Shivpuri

Advances in Manufacturing ›› 2015, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (4) : 269 -281.

PDF
Advances in Manufacturing ›› 2015, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (4) : 269 -281. DOI: 10.1007/s40436-015-0127-0
Article

Dual phase titanium alloy hot forging process design: experiments and numerical modeling

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

Titanium alloys are considered desirable materials when both good mechanical properties and weight reduction are required at the same time. This class of materials is widely used in those fields (aeronautics, aerospace) in which common steels and light-weight materials, e.g., aluminum alloys, are not able to satisfy all operative service conditions. During the last decade, forging of titanium alloys has attracted greater attention from both industrial and scientific/academic researchers because of their potential in providing a near net shaped part with minimal need for machining. In this paper, a numerical model of the forging sequences for a Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy aerospace component is presented. The model was tested and validated against experimental forgings. The model is then applied to predict loads final microstructure and defects of an aeronautical component. In addition to metal flow and die stresses, microstructural transformations (α and β phases) are considered for the determination of proper process parameters. It is found that transformation from α/β to β phase during forging and reverse transformations in post-forge cooling needs to be considered in the computational model for reasonable prediction of forging loads and product properties.

Keywords

Finite element method (FEM) / Ti-6Al-4V / Hot forging / Phase prediction

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
A. Ducato, G. Buffa, L. Fratini, R. Shivpuri. Dual phase titanium alloy hot forging process design: experiments and numerical modeling. Advances in Manufacturing, 2015, 3(4): 269-281 DOI:10.1007/s40436-015-0127-0

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Kuhlman GW. Forging of titanium alloys. ASM handbook: metalworking. Bulk Forming, 2005, 14A: 331-353.

[2]

Pishko R, Ripepi MA, Kuhlman GW, et al. Modeling of deformation and structure during conventional forging of titanium-alloys. J Metals, 1987, 39(10): A2-A2.

[3]

Boyer RR. An overview on the use of titanium in the aerospace industry. Mat Sci Eng a-Struct, 1996, 213(1–2): 103-114.

[4]

Baufeld B, Biest OVD, Gault R. Additive manufacturing of Ti-6Al-4V components by shaped metal deposition: microstructure and mechanical properties. Mater Design, 2010, 31: S106-S111.

[5]

Park NK, Yeom JT, Na YS. Characterization of deformation stability in hot forging of conventional Ti-6Al-4V using processing maps. J Mater Process Technol, 2002, 130: 540-545.

[6]

Lutjering G, Williams JC (2003) Titanium matrix composites. Eng Mater Process 2003:313–328

[7]

Wang J, Fu P, Liu H, et al. Shrinkage porosity criteria and optimized design of a 100-ton 30Cr2Ni4MoV forging ingot. Mater Des, 2012, 35: 446-456.

[8]

Bariani PF, Negro DT, Bruschi S. Testing and modelling of material response to deformation in bulk metal forming. Ann Cirp, 2004, 53(2): 573-595.

[9]

Astarita A, Testani C, Scherillo F, et al. Beta forging of a Ti6Al4V Component for aeronautic applications: microstructure evolution. Metallogr Microstruct Anal, 2014, 3(6): 460-467.

[10]

Astarita A, Ducato A, Fratini L, et al. Beta forging of Ti-6Al-4V: microstructure evolution and mechanical properties. Key Eng Mater, 2013, 554–557: 359-371.

[11]

Ducato A, Fratini L, Micari F. Advanced numerical models for the thermo-mechanical-metallurgical analysis in hot forging processes. AIP Conf Proc, 2013, 1532(3): 3-14.

[12]

Cai J, Li FG, Liu TY, et al. Constitutive equations for elevated temperature flow stress of Ti-6Al-4V alloy considering the effect of strain. Mater Des, 2011, 32(3): 1144-1151.

[13]

Seshacharyulu T, Medeiros SC, Frazier WG, et al. Hot working of commercial Ti-6Al-4V with an equiaxed α–β microstructure: materials modeling considerations. Mater Sci Eng A, 2000, 284(1–2): 184-194.

[14]

Semiatin SL, Goetz RL, Seetharaman V, et al. Cavitation and failure during hot forging of Ti-6Al-4V. Metall Mater Trans A, 1999, 30(5): 1411-1424.

[15]

Hu ZM, Dean TA. Aspects of forging of titanium alloys and the production of blade forms. J Mater Process Tech, 2001, 111(1–3): 10-19.

[16]

Geijselaers HJM, Huétink H. Thermo-mechanical analysis with phase transformations. AIP Conf Proc, 2004, 712(1): 1508-1513.

[17]

Casotto S, Pascon F. Thermo-mechanical-metallurgical model to predict geometrical distortions of rings during cooling phase after ring rolling operations. Int J Mach Tool Manu, 2005, 45(6): 657-664.

[18]

Sha W, Malinov S. Titanium alloys: modelling of microstructure, properties and applications, 2009, Woodhead: CRC Press.

[19]

Boyer RF, Welsch G, Collings EW (1994) Materials properties handbook: titanium alloys. ASM international

[20]

Kim JH, Semiatin SL, Hwan Lee Y, et al. A self-consistent approach for modeling the flow behavior of the alpha and beta phases in Ti-6Al-4V. Metall Mater Trans A, 2011, 42A(7): 1805-1814.

[21]

Semiatin SL, Montheillet F, Shen G, et al. Self-consistent modeling of the flow behavior of wrought alpha/beta titanium alloys under isothermal and nonisothermal hot-working conditions. Metall Mater Trans A, 2002, 33(8): 2719-2727.

[22]

Ducato A, Fratini L, Cascia ML, et al. Wilson R, Hancock E, Bors A, Smith W, et al. An automated visual inspection system for the classification of the phases of Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy. Computer analysis of images and patterns, 2013, Berlin Heidelberg: Springer 362-369.

[23]

Buffa G, Ducato A, Fratini L. FEM based prediction of phase transformations during friction stir welding of Ti6Al4V titanium alloy. Mater Sci Eng A, 2013, 581(10): 56-65.

[24]

Bruschi S, Buffa G, Ducato A, et al. Phase evolution in hot forging of dual phase titanium alloys: experiments and numerical analysis. J Manuf Process, 2015.

[25]

Semiatin S, Knisley S, Fagin P, et al. Microstructure evolution during alpha-beta heat treatment of Ti-6Al-4V. Metall Mater Trans A, 2003, 34(10): 2377-2386.

[26]

Seshacharyulu T, Medeiros S, Frazier W, et al. Hot working of commercial Ti-6Al-4V with an equiaxed α–β microstructure: materials modeling considerations. Mater Sci Eng A, 2000, 284(1): 184-194.

Funding

Universiy of Palermo

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

133

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/