Hydroforming

Hydroforming is a cost-effective way of shaping ductile metals such as aluminum, brass, low alloy steel, and stainless steel into lightweight, structurally stiff and strong pieces. One of the largest applications of hydroforming is the automotive industry, which makes use of the complex shapes made possible by hydroforming to produce stronger, lighter, and more rigid unibody structures for vehicles. This technique is particularly popular with the high-end sports car industry and is also frequently employed in the shaping of aluminium tubes for bicycle frames.

Hydroforming is a specialized type of die forming that uses a high pressure hydraulic fluid to press room temperature working material into a die. To hydroform aluminum into a vehicle's frame rail, a hollow tube of aluminum is placed inside a negative mold that has the shape of the desired result. High pressure hydraulic pumps then inject fluid at very high pressure inside the aluminum tube which causes it to expand until it matches the mold. The hydroformed aluminum is then removed from the mold. Hydroforming allows complex shapes with concavities to be formed, which would be difficult or impossible with standard solid die stamping. Hydroformed parts can often be made with a higher stiffness-to-weight ratio and at a lower per unit cost than traditional stamped or stamped and welded parts. Virtually all metals capable of cold forming can be hydroformed, including aluminum, brass, carbon and stainless steel, copper, and high strength alloys.[1]

Main process variants

Sheet hydroforming

This process is based on the 1950s patent for hydramolding by Fred Leuthesser, Jr. and John Fox of the Schaible Company of Cincinnati, Ohio in the United States.[2] It was originally used in producing kitchen spouts. This was done because in addition to the strengthening of the metal, hydromolding also produced less "grainy" parts, allowing for easier metal finishing.[3] In sheet hydroforming (SHF) there are bladder forming (where there is a bladder that contains the liquid; no liquid contacts the sheet) and hydroforming where the fluid contacts the sheet (no bladder). Bladder forming is sometimes called flexforming.[4] Flexforming is mostly used for low volume productions, as in the aerospace field.[5] Forming with the fluid in direct contact with the part can be done either with a male solid punch (this version is sometimes called hydro-mechanical deep drawing[6]) or with a female solid die. In hydro-mechanical deep drawing, a work piece is placed on a draw ring (blank holder) over a male punch then a hydraulic chamber surrounds the work piece and a relatively low initial pressure seats the work piece against the punch. The punch then is raised into the hydraulic chamber and pressure is increased to as high as 15000 psi which forms the part around the punch. Then the pressure is released and punch retracted, hydraulic chamber lifted, and the process is complete.

Alternative names, other variants and similar processes

Tube hydroforming

In tube hydroforming (THF) there are two major practices: high pressure and low pressure. With the high pressure process the tube is fully enclosed in a die prior to pressurization of the tube. In low pressure the tube is slightly pressurized to a fixed volume during the closing of the die (this used to be called the Variform process). Historically, the process was patented in the '50s,[7] but it was industrially spread in the '70s for the production of large T-shaped joints for the oil & gas industry.Today it is mostly used in the automotive sector, where many industrial applications can be found.[8][9] It is also a method of choice for several tubular members of bicycles. In tube hydroforming pressure is applied to the inside of a tube that is held by dies with the desired cross sections and forms. When the dies are closed, the tube ends are sealed by axial punches and the tube is filled with hydraulic fluid. The internal pressure can go up to a few thousand bars and it causes the tube to calibrate against the dies. The fluid is injected into the tube through one of the two axial punches. Axial punches are movable and their action is required to provide axial compression and to feed material towards the center of the bulging tube. Transverse counterpunches may also be incorporated in the forming die in order to form protrusions with small diameter/length ratio. Transverse counter punches may also be used to punch holes in the work piece at the end of the forming process.

Designing the process has in the past been a challenging task, since initial analytical modeling is possible only for limited cases.[10] Advances in FEA and FEM in recent years has enabled hydroform processes to be more widely engineered for varieties of parts and materials. Often FEM simulations must be performed in order to find a feasible process solution and to define the correct loading curves: pressure vs. time and axial feed vs. time.[11] In the case of more complex tube hydroformed parts the tube must be pre-bent prior to loading into the hydroforming die. Bending is done sequentially along the length of the tube, with the tube being bent around bending discs (or dies) as the tube length is fed in. Bending can be done with or without mandrels. This additional complexity of process further increases the reliance on FEM for designing and evaluating manufacturing processes. The feasibility of a hydroforming process must take into consideration the initial tube material properties and its potential for variation, along with the bending process, hydraulic pressure throughout the forming process, in inclusion of axial feed or not, in order to predict metal formability.

Process sequence in tube hydroforming of a t-shape with counterpunch

Typical tools

Tools and punches can be interchanged for different part requirements. One advantage of hydroforming is the savings on tools. For sheet metal only a draw ring and punch (metalworking) or male die is required. Depending on the part being formed, the punch can be made from epoxy, rather than metal. The bladder of the hydroform itself acts as the female die eliminating the need to fabricate it. This allows for changes in material thickness to be made with usually no necessary changes to the tool. However, dies must be highly polished and in tube hydroforming a two-piece die is required to allow opening and closing.

Geometry produced

Another advantage of hydroforming is that complex shapes can be made in one step. In sheet hydroforming (SHF) with the bladder acting as the male die almost limitless geometries can be produced. However, the process is limited by the very high closing force required in order to seal the dies, especially for large panels and thick hard materials. Small concave corner radii are difficult to be completely calibrated, i.e. filled, because too large a pressure would be required. in fact, the die closing force can be very high, both in tube and sheet hydroforming and may easily overcome the maximum tonnage of the forming press. In order to keep the die closing force under prescribed limits, the maximum internal fluid pressure must be limited. This reduces the calibration abilities of the process, i.e. it reduces the possibility of forming parts with small concave radii. Limits of the SHF process are due to risks of excessive thinning, fracture, wrinkling and are strictly related to the material formability and to a proper selection of process parameters (e.g. hydraulic pressure vs. time curve). Tube hydroforming (THF) can produce many geometric options as well, reducing the need for tube welding operations. Similar limitations and risks can be listed as in SHF; however, the maximum closing force is seldom a limiting factor in THF.[12]

Tolerances and surface finish

Hydroforming is capable of producing parts within tight tolerances including aircraft tolerances where a common tolerance for sheet metal parts is within 0.76 mm (1/30th of an inch). Then metal hydroforming also allows for a smoother finish as draw marks produced by the traditional method of pressing a male and female die together are eliminated.

While springback has long been a topic of discussion for sheet metal forming operations it has been far less of a topic of research for tube hydroforming. This may in part be a result of the relatively low levels of springback naturally occurring when deforming the tubes into their closed section geometries. Tube Hydroformed sections by the nature of their closed sections are very rigid and do not display high degrees of elastic deformation under load. For this reason it is likely that negative residual stress induced during tube hydroforming might be insufficient to deform the part elastically after the completion of forming. However, as more and more tubular parts are being manufactured using high strength steel and advanced high strength steel[13] parts, springback must be accounted for in the design and manufacture of closed section tube hydroformed parts.

Examples

Notable examples include:

SHF

THF

References

  1. "The Hydroforming Process". Jones Metal Products. Retrieved 2011-06-21.
  2. "first HF patent". Retrieved 17 July 2012.
  3. U.S. Patent 2,713,314
  4. Hatipoğlu, H. Ali; Polat, Naki; Köksal, Arif; Tekkaya, A.Erman (1 January 2007). "Modeling Flexforming (Fluid Cell Forming) Process with Finite Element Method". Key Engineering Materials 344: 469–476. doi:10.4028/www.scientific.net/KEM.344.469.
  5. Strano, M (2006). "Optimization under uncertainty of sheet-metal-forming processes by the finite element method". Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part B: Journal of Engineering Manufacture 220 (8): 1305–1315. doi:10.1243/09544054JEM480.
  6. Dachang, Kang; Yu, Chen; Yongchao, Xu. "Hydromechanical deep drawing of superalloy cups". Journal of Materials Processing Technology 166 (2): 243–246. doi:10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2004.08.024.
  7. "first thf patent". Retrieved 17 July 2012.
  8. Hydroforming for advanced manufacturing, Ed. by M, Koç, 2009 Woodhead Publishing Limited
  9. Hydroforming technology. (conference report): Advanced Materials & Processes (Refereed) : May 1, 1997: ASM International: v151  : n5  : p50(4)
  10. Asnafi, Nader (1999). "Analytical modelling of tube hydroforming". Thin-Walled Structures 34 (4): 295–330. doi:10.1016/S0263-8231(99)00018-X.
  11. Strano, Matteo; Jirathearanat, Suwat; Shr, Shiuan-Guang; Altan, Taylan (2004). "Virtual process development in tube hydroforming". Journal of Materials Processing Technology 146 (1): 130–136. doi:10.1016/S0924-0136(03)00853-7.
  12. http://www.msm.cam.ac.uk/phase-trans/2006/hydroforming.html
  13. Hertell. "Great Designs in Steel 2015" (PDF). may 11, 2015. Autosteel.org.
  14. Weinreb, Sander (8–11 July 2003). Low cost microwave ground terminals for space communication (pdf). 5th International symposium on reducing the cost of spacecraft ground systems and operations. Pasadena, CA: NASA. Retrieved 2008-11-21.
  15. 1 2 Harjinder Singh (2003). Fundamentals of Hydroforming. SME. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-87263-662-0.
  16. Tony Swan (July 2000). "2001 Pontiac Aztek - First Drive Review". Caranddriver.com. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  17. Eric Lundin (24 July 2003). "Tier 1 supplier builds four-stage competitive strategy". The Fabricator. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  18. "2009 Harley Davidson V-Rod Muscle". thekneeslider.com. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  19. "Use of USLAB technologies by automakers growing rapidly". American Iron and Steel Institute. 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  20. 1 2 "Hydroformed Frame Repairs". I-Car Advantage Online. 13 September 2004. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  21. "2006 Pontiac Solstice Sheetmetal Hydroforming Technology". The Auto Channel. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
  22. "Utility Vehicle has hydroformed steel frame.". ThomasNet. 5 December 2003. Retrieved 2008-12-05.
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