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Ch15 With Text

This document discusses extrusion and drawing of metals. Extrusion involves forcing a billet through a die to create solid or hollow cross sections. Common products include tubing, gears, and brackets. Drawing involves pulling wire or tubes through a die to reduce the cross-section. Common drawn products include bolts, screws, and rivets. The document describes the extrusion and drawing processes and variables that affect them such as temperature, speed, and lubrication.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views

Ch15 With Text

This document discusses extrusion and drawing of metals. Extrusion involves forcing a billet through a die to create solid or hollow cross sections. Common products include tubing, gears, and brackets. Drawing involves pulling wire or tubes through a die to reduce the cross-section. Common drawn products include bolts, screws, and rivets. The document describes the extrusion and drawing processes and variables that affect them such as temperature, speed, and lubrication.

Uploaded by

ikaz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 5

Introduction

¾ What is extrusion of metals? ¾ What is drawing of metals?


ƒ Forcing of a billet through a die ƒ Changing or reduction of the
ƒ Can create solid and hollow cross section of a rod, wire, or
cross sections tube by pulling it through a die
ƒ A semi-continuous process ¾ What products are made
Chapter 15 (each billet is extruded
individually).
• Discrete products by cutting
using drawing?
ƒ Rivets, bolts, screws
Extrusion and Drawing of Metals into desired lengths
○ Gears, brackets, coat hangers
ƒ Round and non-round profiles
ƒ What is the difference between
extrusion and drawing?
ƒ Carried out at room temperature
or at elevated temperature. • Push or draw…
Alexandra Schönning, Ph.D. ƒ Often combined with forging
Mechanical Engineering process
University of North Florida • Fasteners, parts for bicycles,
cars, …
Figures by
¾ What is made using
Manufacturing Engineering and Technology
extrusion?
ƒ Railings for slidng doors, tubing
Kalpakijan and Schmid
¾ What material is generally
extruded?
ƒ Aluminum, copper, steel,
magnesium, lead, plastics direct extrusion process

Page 15-1 Page 15-2

Example of products made using extrusion The extrusion process


¾ Names of the process ¾ Other types of extrusion
ƒ Extrusion processes
ƒ Direct extrusion ƒ Indirect extrusion
ƒ Forward extrusion • The die moves toward the billet
¾ What are the process steps? ƒ Hydrostatic extrusion
• The billet is smaller in diameter
ƒ Round billet is placed in a than the chamber.
chamber • The billet is surrounded by a
ƒ The billet is forced through the fluid
die using a hydraulically driven • The pressure is supplied by a
ram or a pressing stem ram
ƒ Die opening may have round or • Friction is low
non-round cross section ƒ Impact extrusion

Figure 15.2 Extrusions, and examples of


products made by sectioning off
extrusions. Source: Kaiser Aluminum.

Page 15-3 Page 15-4

Extrusion Variables Extrusion Force

Ao⋅ k⋅ ln
¾ Geometric Variables ¾ Circumscribing circle ¾ The extrusion force Ao 
ƒ Die angel, α diameter (CCD) F
ƒ Extrusion Ratio: R required depends on  Af 
• Ao/Af: Ratio of the cross ƒ Billet material strength
sectional area of the billet to the
A of the extruded part
¾ k = extrusion constant
ƒ Extrusion ratio
¾ Temperature ƒ Metal and temperature
¾ Speed of ram ƒ Friction billet/chamber dependent
¾ Lubricant type and billet/die
ƒ Diameter of the smallest circle ƒ Temperature
that the cross section can fit
within. ƒ Speed
¾ Shape factor
ƒ One of the variables
determining the complexity of
extrusion
ƒ Ratio of perimeter of extruded
product to the cross sectional
area.
• Circle has the smallest shape
factor

Page 15-5 Page 15-6

1
Metal Flow in Extrusion Extrusion Practice
¾ Effects the mechanical ¾ Dead zone ¾ What materials are extruded? ¾ Straitening and twisting
ƒ Aluminum, copper, magnesium, ƒ May be required for small cross
properties of the part ƒ Metal at corners is almost alloys, steels sections
¾ The metal flows stationary ¾ Extrusion ratio R = Ao/Af ¾ Die angle causes a butt end
longitudinally, resulting ƒ 10 to 100 ƒ Remains in the chamber after
operation is complete
ƒ Lower for less ductile materials
in an elongated grain ƒ At least R=4 to work the ƒ Cut off as scrap
structure material in the plastic region ¾ Stepped extrusion
¾ Length of extruded materials ƒ Extruding the billet partially in
ƒ < 7.5 meters typically one die and then one or more
ƒ 30 meters max dies
¾ CCD (circum scribed
diameters)
ƒ 6 mm – 1m for Aluminum
¾ Ram speeds
ƒ Up to 0.5m/s
ƒ Lower for aluminum, copper
ƒ Higher for steels

Page 15-7 Page 15-8

Hot Extrusion Die Designs and Die Materials


¾ Why hot extrusion? ¾ Square dies ¾ Tubes
ƒ For metals that don’t have sufficient
ductility at room temperature ƒ Used for non-ferrous ƒ Created by fitting a
ƒ Reduce the required extrusion force metals mandrel to the ram
¾ Disadvantages and problems ƒ Dead metal zones develop ƒ Wall thickness, typically
ƒ Die wear due to high operating • Creates a die angle • > 1 mm Al
temperatures • > 3 mm carbon steel
ƒ Cooling of the billet in the chamber – • > 5 mm stainless steels
non-uniform extrusion
• Reduce effects of problem by heating the (a)
die prior to extrusion (c)
ƒ Oxide film develops on surface
• May be abrasive direct extrusion process
• Affects the flow pattern of the metal
• Reduce/remove this problem by using a
dummy block in front of the ram (b)
○ Oxidized layer is left in the container
• Reduce/remove this problem by heating
the billet in an inert-atmosphere furnace

Die design: tapered


Page 15-9 Page 15-10

Hollow Sections Good vs. Bad Cross Section


¾ Welding chamber ¾ What materials does this ¾ Important
methods using special work for? ƒ Symmetry of cross section
dies. ƒ Materials that reweld well ƒ Eliminate sharp corners
¾ How does this method under high pressure ƒ Keep section thickness
• Aluminum uniform
work?
ƒ Metal divides and flows ¾ Lubricants can’t be used ƒ Avoid extreme change in
around the supports of the ƒ Prevents rewelding the dimensions of the
internal mandrel. cross section
• This results in strands
ƒ Rewelding of the strands
occur within the chamber
after the supports and
before the die
• High pressure makes this
possible Figure 15.10 Poor and good examples of cross-sections to be extruded. Note the importance of
eliminating sharp corners and of keeping section thicknesses uniform. Source: J. G. Bralla (ed.);
Handbook of Product Design for Manufacturing. New York: McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, 1986.
Used with permission.
Page 15-11 Page 15-12

2
Die Materials and Lubrication Cold Extrusion
¾Die materials ¾ Often involves different manufacturing operations such
as direct and indirect extrusion and forging.
ƒ Hot worked die steels
¾ Used in making
ƒ Coatings may be applied to extend life ƒ Tools and components in cars, motorcycles, bicycles,
¾Lubrication appliances…
¾ Advantages over hot extrusion
ƒ Glass: a glass cylinder is placed in the die entrance of ƒ Improved mechanical properties through work-hardening
the chamber. The billet heats the glass and the ƒ Good control of dimensional tolerances
molten glass acts as a lubricant at the die interface. ƒ Improved surface finish
ƒ Jacketing or canning ƒ Elimination of need for billet heating
• If the metal is likely to stick to the container walls, then the ¾ Disadvantages
billet can be enclosed by a thin-walled container of a softer ƒ Stress magnitudes on the tools are high Æ wears the die
metal.
¾ Lubrication
ƒ Applied to the workpiece

Page 15-13 Page 15-14

Examples of Cold Extrusion Impact Extrusion


¾ Typically considered a
cold extrusion process
¾ Components
ƒ Die
ƒ Blank (or slug)
ƒ Punch
¾ Punch forces the blank to
extrude backward

Page 15-15 Page 15-16

Hydrostatic Extrusion Extrusion Defects


¾ Incompressible fluid surrounds the billet ¾ Surface cracking ¾ Internal Cracking
ƒ Vegetable oils are used ƒ At high temperatures: ƒ Due to tensile stresses at the
• Resulting from too high center line in the deformation
¾ Billet is a little smaller than the container temperature, friction, speed zone
• Surface starts to crack and then ƒ Tendency of center cracking
¾ Usually at room temperature tear • Increases with increased die
¾ Advantage ƒ At lower temperatures angle
• Bamboo defect • Increases with increased
ƒ No container wall friction ○ The billet may temporarily amount of impurities
ƒ Brittle materials can be extruded using this method since the stick, the pressure increases and • Decreases with increasing
the billet moves forward. extrusion ratio and friction
ductility increases with the hydrostatic pressure
¾ Pipe effect
ƒ Small die angles and high extrusion ratios can be used ƒ Surface oxides and impurities
¾ Disadvantage are drawn to the center of the
billet (like a funnel)
ƒ Tooling is complex ƒ Minimize by making the flow
ƒ Results in minimal industrial applications pattern more uniform (reduce
friction and temperature
gradients)

Page 15-17 Page 15-18

3
Extrusion Equipment The Drawing Process

¾Most common are horizontal hydraulic presses ¾ What is it? ¾ Drawing force (F)
ƒ Speed of the operation can be controlled ƒ The cross-section of a round
F Yavg⋅ Af ⋅ ln
Ao 
wire/rod is reduced in size or
¾Cold extrusion changed in shape by pulling it
through a die.
 Af 
ƒ Yavg: average stress of material
ƒ Typically vertical hydraulic presses ¾ Variables drawn
ƒ Amount of reduction in cross- ƒ Af: exit cross-sectional area
ƒ More economical as they require less floor space sectional area ƒ Ao: initial cross-sectional area
ƒ Die angle ¾ Max reduction in cross-sectional
• Optimum angle for minimum area: 63%
drawing force can be computed.
• Other product quality dimensions
may require a different angle.
ƒ Friction along die/workpiece
ƒ Drawing speed

Figure 15.17 General view of a 9-MN


(1000-ton) hydraulic-extrusion press.
Source: Courtesy of Jones & Laughlin
Steel Corporation.

Page 15-19 Page 15-20

Drawing Process / Practice Die Design


¾ Drawing of other shapes ¾ Drawing speed ¾ Die angles usually range
ƒ Initial cross section is typically
round or square
ƒ Material dependent from 6o to 15o
ƒ 1 m/s to 50 m/s (fine wire)
ƒ Mandrels can be used for ¾ Typically reductions in area
¾ Typically have two
internal cavities
are kept below 45% angles: approach and
ƒ Ironing can be used to obtain
flat sheets (a wedge shaped die ¾ Sizing operations relieve angle
is used) ƒ Small reduction in area ¾ Basic design has been
ƒ Used primarily to improve developed through trial
surface finish and dimensional
accuracy
and error
¾ Annealing may be necessary ¾ The land gives the final
between passes to maintain dimension of the product
sufficient ductility in the ¾ Die materials
material
ƒ Tool steels
¾ Bundle drawing
ƒ Numerous wires can be drawn ƒ Diamonds
at the same time. • Used for fine wire
ƒ Can result in wires as fine as • Used as inserts
4µm.
Page 15-21 Page 15-22

Lubrication Defects and Residual Stresses

¾Wet drawing ¾ Defects ¾ Residual Stresses


ƒ Dies and the rods are completely immersed in the ƒ Similar to those of ƒ Common in cold drawn
extrusion products
lubricant • Common is center cracking ƒ Sometimes to an
¾Dry drawing ƒ Seams are common advantage; sometimes to a
ƒ The surface of the rod is coated with the lubricant • Longitudinal scratches or disadvantage
folds in the material ƒ Warping may occur if
(soap)
material is removed
¾Coating
ƒ Rod or wire is coated with a soft metal acting as
lubricant
¾Ultrasonic vibration of the dies and mandrel
ƒ Reduce forces, improve surface finish, and improve
die life
Page 15-23 Page 15-24

4
Drawing Equipment Roll Straightening
¾ Draw bench
ƒ A single die
ƒ Used for diameters Figure 15.22 Schematic illustration of roll straightening of a drawn round rod (see also Fig. 13.7).
> 20 mm
ƒ Lengths < 30 m
¾ Bull block
ƒ Usually multiple dies are
used
ƒ Lengths = several
kilometers

Page 15-25 Page 15-26

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