Experimental Study on the Incremental Forming of Coated Aluminum Alloy Sheets

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Abstract:

Superficial coatings are widely used in industrial applications in order to improve the superficial properties of metallic components. In particular, in the aeronautic field, all the components are coated in order to prevent both corrosion and wear. In this field, heat treatable aluminum alloys, in age hardened condition, are used; consequently, superficial coatings must be carried out through “cold” processes, i.e. coating processes in which the component to be coated remains at low temperatures, below 100°C. Cold gas dynamic spray technique (CGDS) is a process of deposition that consists in the realization of surface coatings with high-velocity metal particles sprayed on the substrate at temperature significantly lower than the melting one of the substrate itself and at relatively low temperatures if compared to other spray techniques. When processing conditions are optimized, the process can produce near fully dense coatings. This technique could be particularly useful in the coating of rolled sheets, needing of successive cold plastic deformations. One of the cold plastic processes is incremental forming, a high flexible process for rapid manufacturing of complex sheet metal part shapes; it presents the potential to be easy to automate and particularly attractive for small batches and customized parts. In this process, a simple tool describes a path that allows to locally deform the sheet clamped along its periphery. The aim of this paper is to study the evolution and behaviour of aluminum coating deposed by CGDS on AA 2024-T3 sheets carried out by an incremental forming process. This evaluation is carried out by characterizing the cold sprayed coating after the forming process for different wall angles of simples geometries.

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Periodical:

Key Engineering Materials (Volumes 622-623)

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398-405

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September 2014

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