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MSE 440/540: Processing of Metallic Materials

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Title: MSE 440/540: Processing of Metallic Materials


1
MSE 440/540 Processing of Metallic Materials
  • Instructors Yuntian Zhu
  • Office 308 RBII
  • Ph 513-0559
  • ytzhu_at_ncsu.edu
  • Lecture 9 Forging

2
Forging
  • Deformation process in which work is compressed
    between two dies
  • Oldest of the metal forming operations
  • Dates from about 5000 B C
  • Products engine crankshafts, connecting rods,
    gears, aircraft structural components, jet engine
    turbine parts
  • Also, basic metals industries use forging to
    establish basic shape of large parts that are
    subsequently machined to final geometry and size

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFa0FVYxbVWk (Axe,
5.5 min)
3
Classification of Forging Operations
  • Cold vs. hot forging
  • Hot or warm forging advantage reduction in
    strength and increase in ductility of work metal
  • Cold forging advantage increased strength due
    to strain hardening
  • Impact vs. press forging
  • Forge hammer - applies an impact force
  • Forge press - applies gradual force

4
Types of Forging Operations
  • Open-die forging - work is compressed between two
    flat dies, allowing metal to flow laterally with
    minimum constraint
  • Impression-die forging - die contains cavity or
    impression that is imparted to workpart
  • Metal flow is constrained so that flash is
    created
  • Flashless forging (closed die forging) - workpart
    is completely constrained in die

5
Open-Die Forging
  • Compression of workpart between two flat dies
  • Deformation operation reduces height and
    increases diameter of work
  • Also called upsetting or upset forging

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vdK6eZGeDjZg
(Sword, 3 min)
6
Open-Die Forging with No Friction
  • (1) Start of process with workpiece at its
    original length and diameter, (2) partial
    compression, and (3) final size

True strain
Quiz What is engineering strain?
7
Open-Die Forging with Friction
  • Actual deformation of a cylindrical workpart in
    open-die forging, showing pronounced barreling
    (1) start of process, (2) partial deformation,
    and (3) final shape

8
Impression-Die Forging
  • Compression of workpart by dies
  • Flash is formed by metal that flows beyond die
    cavity into small gap between die plates
  • Flash must be later trimmed, but it serves an
    important function during compression
  • As flash forms, friction resists continued metal
    flow into gap, constraining metal to fill die
    cavity

9
Impression-Die Forging Practice
  • Several forming steps are often required
  • With separate die cavities for each step
  • Beginning steps redistribute metal for more
    uniform deformation and desired metallurgical
    structure in subsequent steps
  • Final steps bring the part to final geometry

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vmySkT0Gw_X0 (1
min)
10
Advantages and Limitations of Impression-Die
Forging
  • Advantages compared to machining from solid
    stock
  • Higher production rates
  • Less waste of metal
  • Greater strength
  • Favorable grain orientation in the metal
  • Limitations
  • Not capable of close tolerances
  • Machining is often required to achieve accuracies
    and features needed

Quiz why forging improve the strength?
11
Flashless (closed die) Forging
  • Compression of work in punch and die tooling
    whose cavity does not allow for flash
  • Starting work volume must equal die cavity volume
    within very close tolerance
  • Process control more demanding than
    impression-die forging
  • Best suited to part geometries that are simple
    and symmetrical
  • Often classified as a precision forging process

12
Flashless Forging (Closed Die Forging)
  • (1) Just before contact with workpiece, (2)
    partial compression, and (3) final punch and die
    closure

13
Upset Forging
  • Upset forging to form a head on a bolt or similar
    hardware item (1) wire stock is fed to stop, (2)
    gripping dies close on stock and stop retracts,
    (3) punch moves forward, (4) bottoms to form the
    head

14
Heading (Upset Forging)
  • Examples of heading operations (a) heading a
    nail using open dies, (b) round head formed by
    punch, (c) and (d) two common head styles for
    screws formed by die, (e) carriage bolt head
    formed by punch and die

http//www.youtube.com/watch?v218nPKuoKSM (Nail,
1.5 miin)
15
Swaging
  • Accomplished by rotating dies that hammer a
    workpiece radially inward to taper it as the
    piece is fed into the dies
  • Used to reduce diameter of tube or solid rod
    stock
  • Mandrel sometimes required to control shape and
    size of internal diameter of tubular parts

16
Swaging and Radial Forging
  • Swaging process to reduce solid rod stock dies
    rotate as they hammer the work
  • In radial forging, workpiece rotates while dies
    remain in a fixed orientation as they hammer the
    work

http//www.youtube.com/watch?vilL8ViUDUKc
(cartoon, 1.5 min)
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vo1ZU6Yh0ce4 (37
sec)
17
HW assignment
  • Reading assignment Chapters 13
  • Review Questions 13.10, 13.11, 13.12, 13.14,
  • Problems 13.10, 13.12, 13.14
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