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Impact Testing of a Hot-Formed B-Pillar with Tailored Properties - Experiments and Simulation

Journal Article
2013-01-0608
ISSN: 1946-3979, e-ISSN: 1946-3987
Published April 08, 2013 by SAE International in United States
Impact Testing of a Hot-Formed B-Pillar with Tailored Properties - Experiments and Simulation
Sector:
Citation: George, R., Worswick, M., Detwiler, D., and Kang, J., "Impact Testing of a Hot-Formed B-Pillar with Tailored Properties - Experiments and Simulation," SAE Int. J. Mater. Manf. 6(2):157-162, 2013, https://doi.org/10.4271/2013-01-0608.
Language: English

Abstract:

This paper presents the numerical validation of the impact response of a hot formed B-pillar component with tailored properties. A laboratory-scale B-pillar tool is considered with integral heating and cooling sections in an effort to locally control the cooling rate of an austenitized blank, thereby producing a part with tailored microstructures to potentially improve the impact response of these components. An instrumented falling-weight drop tower was used to impact the lab-scale B-pillars in a modified 3-point bend configuration to assess the difference between a component in the fully hardened (martensitic) state and a component with a tailored region (consisting of bainite and ferrite).
Numerical models were developed using LS-DYNA to simulate the forming and thermal history of the part to estimate the final thickness and strain distributions as well as the predicted microstructures. A strain-rate-sensitive constitutive model is used to model the as-quenched behavior of the hot-formed components with tailored microstructures.
With an impact mass of 300 kg and total energy of 1.7 kJ, the measured maximum impactor displacement of the tailored components was approximately 9% (7.6 mm) greater than the fully hardened components. The measured peak impact load of the tailored components was approximately 24% (9.3 kN) lower than the fully hardened components. The numerical impact models are able to capture the force-displacement and deformation trends observed in the experiments.