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Inverse Identification of a Constitutive Model for High-Speed Forming Simulation: An Application to Electromagnetic Metal Forming.

Dayoung KangHak-Gon NohJeong KimKyunghoon Lee
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Forming simulation requires a constitutive model whose parameters are typically determined with tensile tests assumed static. However, this conventional approach is impractical for high-speed forming simulation characterized by high strain rates inducing transient effects. To identify constitutive parameters in relation to high-speed forming simulation, we formulated the problem of constitutive modeling as inverse parameter estimation addressed by regularized nonlinear least squares. Regarding the proposed inverse constitutive modeling, we adopted the L -curve method for proper regularization and model order reduction for rapid simulation. For demonstration, we corroborated the proposed strategy by identifying the modified Johnson-Cook model in the context of a free bulge test with electromagnetic metal forming simulation. The L -curve method allowed us to systematically choose a regularization parameter, and model order reduction brought enormous computational savings. After identifying constitutive parameters, we successfully verified and validated the reduced and original simulation models, respectively, with a manufactured workpiece. In addition, we validated the numerically identified constitutive model with a dynamic material test using a split Hopkinson pressure bar. Overall, we showed that inverse constitutive modeling for high-speed forming simulation can be effectively tackled by regularized nonlinear least squares with the help of an L -curve and a reduced-order model.
Keyphrases
  • high speed
  • atomic force microscopy
  • virtual reality
  • high frequency