As a response to the growing demand for miniaturization, the production of sheet-formed products has experienced substantial growth in recent years. Sheet forming technology can be classified as drawing, stretch-flanging, and bending. During the forming process, defects, such as fractures and excessive local thinning or wrinkling, may arise as a result of insufficient formability or incorrect parameter settings. Such defects may affect the precision and life of the workpiece as well as product yield. They need to be avoided at the mold design stage. The miniaturization of metal forming processes is influenced by the scale effect, and the parameter control differs from that used in general metal forming. For example, surface roughness of the metal and friction during the forming process, as well as plastic flow stress and spring-back, are very important. This makes accurate prediction and control of the parameters in micro forming processes very important [
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Sheet metal micro-forming is one of the key processing techniques used in the manufacturing industry and has three basic categories [
5]: drawing, stretch-flanging, and bending. In the forming process, sheet metal can fracture, suffer local over-thinning, or wrinkle because of bad formability or the incorrect setting of processing parameters. This has now become an important area of research. Square hole-flanging is a type of sheet metal drawing [
6] that can be used for making automobile or aircraft parts, pipe connections, and parts of many ordinary household appliances. In general sheet metal forming, the processing parameters are usually acquired by trial and error, or determined by experts based on experience. However, now that parameters can be determined by simulation, for square hole-flanging, as in this study, for example, the guesswork can be eliminated. This saves time, manpower, and money in die making factories.
In the plastic deformation of sheet metal there are many factors that need consideration, which include the actual properties of the material, the shape of the die, and the friction between the punch, the die, and the sheet metal. The square-hole-flanging procedure discussed in this study starts with the reaming and drawing of a piece of sheet metal with a square hole using a square punch. The metal bends close to the square column of the punch; the square hole expands with the descending punch, and the periphery expands; the metal thins to a forming limit after a certain amount of drawing. The peripheral thickness of the hole is rapidly thinned as necking proceeds, and then it fractures. These square hole flanging steps can all be simulated in advance to avoid such an unfortunate outcome. The sheet metal thickness distribution and the thinned form distribution from a macro to micro relationship between punch load and stroke, as well as the deformation, which can all be pre-simulated, and a stress–strain diagram can be prepared. The advantages of computer numerical simulation are utilized to reduce costs by shortening the development and design period as well as improving product quality and optimizing the design process.
Kawka and Makinouchi [
7] proposed degenerated shell elements and combined them in a statically explicit finite element equation to compare distinct integration rules, including complete integration, simplified integration, selective reduced integration, the assumed strain field, and the stable matrix rule. When Leu [
8] discussed hole-flanging with the elastic–plastic finite element method, the stress borne by the hole periphery was assumed to be a single circular drawing stress so that the destructive model was simplified into a simple drawing test. Furthermore, an if-statement composed of a stress concentration factor, a work hardening index, and an orthotropic coefficient was deducted from the uniaxial drawing test to judge the hole edge necking of the flange. Takuda and Hatta [
9] analyzed sheet metal forming using the rigid–plastic finite element method and utilized ductile fracture criteria for estimating the forming limit of commercial zircon sheet metal in a deep drawing process. The results showed the higher drawability of the zircon sheet and fracture location could be predicted using a combination of finite element analysis and ductile fracture criteria. Kumagai et al. [
10] studied the thinning in hole-flanging in an Al/Cu alloy sheet where a cone punch with an angle of 45° was used for a hole-flanging test. The final shape of the flanged hole could be predicted by a comparison of FEM simulation results with experimental results, using the rigid–plastic finite element method. Worswick and Finn [
11] simulated the formation of round, square and Z hole-flanges using the explicit dynamic finite element method and combined the forming limit diagram with the yield criteria of Von Mises, Hill, and Barlat to discuss the sheet metal forming limit. Huang and Chien [
12] analyzed the forming limit of cylindrical punch radius in hole-flanging. Numerical analyses showed that the effects of punch contour radius on the forming limit was not obvious but was largely dependent on the punch load. Leu et al. [
13] compared the maximal punch load in hole-flanging with various geometric shapes of punch (cone, hemisphere, and cylinder) and the changes in some processing parameters. Their numerical simulation and experimental results showed that the forming load on the cylindrical punch was the highest. The load on the punch increased sharply with punch angle in the conical punch, and the friction coefficient increased gradually for the other punches as well. In this present study, a square hole blank was stretched and formed with a square punch in such a way that the blank adhered to the arc corner of the punch and bent to form a square column. The stretch forming behavior of the flange around a square hole is quite complex, and careful simulation and analysis were required to ensure a finished product with accurate size and shape. Dynaform finite element analysis was used to simulate the stretch forming, and experiments were conducted to confirm and analyze the results. This was done specifically to determine whether Dynaform could produce accurate data for the stretch forming process that would be suitable for use in the relevant factory procedures, and to provide a reference for stretch forming parameters and mold design.