Material Property and Formability Characterization of Various Types of High Strength Dual Phase Steel
2009-01-0794
04/20/2009
- Event
- Content
- As a result of the increasing usage of high strength steels in automotive body structures, a number of formability issues, particularly bend and edge stretch failures, have come to the forefront of attention of both automotive OEMs and steel makers. This investigation reviews these stamping problems and attempts to identify how certain material properties and microstructural features relate to forming behavior. Various types of dual phase steels were evaluated in terms of tensile, bending, hole expansion, limiting dome height, and impact properties. In addition, the key microstructural differences of each grade were characterized. In order to understand the material behavior under practical conditions, stamping trials were conducted using actual part shapes. It was concluded that material properties can be optimized to maximize local formability in stamping applications. The results also emphasize that the dual phase classification can encompass a broad range of property variations.
- Pages
- 10
- Citation
- Dykeman, J., Hoydick, D., Link, T., and Mitsuji, H., "Material Property and Formability Characterization of Various Types of High Strength Dual Phase Steel," SAE Technical Paper 2009-01-0794, 2009, https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-0794.