Title of article :
Operator-split damage-plasticity applied to groove forming in food can lids
Author/Authors :
S.H.A. Boers، نويسنده , , P.J.G. Schreurs ، نويسنده , , M.G.D. Geers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
This paper presents a numerical–experimental analysis of damage engineering applied to a well-known industrial problem.
Many food cans are manually opened by raising a tab on the lid, thus initiating a crack, which is propagated along a
circumferential groove. The influence of the groove geometry and depth on the opening force and the resistance against
premature opening is investigated for some packaging materials, by making use of dedicated experimental techniques
and an operator-split damage-plasticity framework. Attention is focused on a small part of the groove at a location halfway
the circular crack-path, 900 from the crack initiation point. First, the groovemanufacturing is analyzed by pressing a punch
into a thin sheet of the material. Grooved specimens are loaded in tension, simulating the internal pressure during sterilization,
and in shear, simulating the opening. Experiments have been carried out using a miniaturized tensile/compression
stage located in the objective field of an opticalmicroscope. For the computational analysis, an operator-split damage-plasticity
model is proposed, where ductile damage is easily operated in conjunction with standard plasticity models. Simulations
are done within a geometrically non-linear context, using a hypo-elasto-plastic material model with non-linear
hardening and a contact algorithm to simulate the contact bodies in the groove forming process. An arbitrary–
Lagrange–Euler (ALE) technique and adaptive remeshing are used to assuremesh quality during the large deformation process.
The operator-split procedure used for the solution of the governing equations, allows to make easy use of a non-local
damage operator as an extra feature within a commercial FEMpackage. Experimental results reveal that a reduction up to
20% for the opening force with unchanged pre-opening resistance can be reached with the use of an asymmetric punch for
the groove forming. Numerical and experimental results are in good agreement. Simulations show that the industrial process
of can lid production can be optimized considerably by controlling damage evolution in the first stage of the process.
Keywords :
Food cans , groove forming , Softening , Gradient plasticity , ALE , Remeshing , Canning , Nonlocal damage
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures