3.2. The Deformation Behavior Analysis
The initial gaps between the pipe and the casing were set as 0.11 mm, 0.5 mm, 1 mm, 1.5 mm, and 2 mm, respectively, and numerical simulations were carried out under the same 6 kV discharge voltage.
Under the same discharge voltage, the forming effect under different initial clearances is shown in
Figure 16, with an increase in the initial gap between the tube and the tube, as shown in
Figure 16c, the area where the tube was deformed and embedded in the groove of the tube kept becoming larger to the bottom of the trench. As shown in
Figure 17, with an increase in the gap between the pipe and the casing, the peak velocity of the unit in the deformation zone of the pipe also increased, and the peak velocity was as high as 278.7 m/s under the 2 mm gap. The groove edge area was severely deformed, resulting in the phenomenon of “collapse”, as shown in
Figure 16e.
In the case of only focusing on 6061 fitting local deformations, a naturally big initial gap and voltage can cause more severe local deformation, but from the perspective of the forming effect of the actual pipe joint, on the one hand, pipe— the set of an initial gap will make the pipe—set of a preset clearance is difficult, even pipe fittings happened in the preset clearance deformation strengthening. On the other hand, it can be found from the numerical simulation results that the groove edge of the sleeve is crushed under the condition of excessive clearance and voltage. Therefore, when the embedding rate of the pipe joint is more than 85%, a smaller gap should be selected to avoid the phenomenon of groove edge collapse.
The groove embedment rate was measured under the conditions of different pipe-tube sleeve initial gaps. As shown in
Figure 18, the embedment rate was 88.7% under the condition of a 1 mm initial gap, which reached the requirement of 85%. When the gap reached 1.5 mm and 2 mm, the groove embedment rate was close to 100%, but the groove edge “slumped”. Therefore, in the variable gap electromagnetic bulging process scheme, the initial gap and discharge voltage should be selected to be as small as possible while ensuring the groove embedding rate, so as to avoid the phenomenon of serious deformation of the sleeve’s groove edge. From the point of view of the forming effect under a discharge voltage of 6 kV, it is appropriate to select the initial gap between the pipe and casing of 1 mm. At this time, the forming process of the pipe joint is shown in
Figure 19.
The magnetic pulse forming process of the pipe joint is divided into two stages: the first stage is the free expansion stage of the pipe before the collision between the pipe and the sleeve, and the other is the local deformation stage where the pipe and the sleeve collide and deform into the groove. The free expansion stage lasts for a relatively long time, as shown in
Figure 19a–c. As can be seen from the three-way stress curves for the four cells in
Figure 20a, the tube is subjected to a two-way tensile state, i.e., annular tensile stress
σθ, axial tensile stress
σz, and radial stress
σr, which is negligible.
When the tube collides with the sleeve, the area of the tube that corresponds to the sleeve groove continues to deform into the groove, which is a critical stage in the forming of the pipe joint. As shown in
Figure 20d–f, the localized deformation phase occurs in a very short time, with the tube material being largely embedded in the sleeve groove area in only 2.5 µs. During this phase, significant localized plastic deformation of the tube occurs, with the maximum equivalent plastic strain increasing from 0.04457 prior to the collision to 1.067 and occurring at the edge of the groove. This is due to the strong shear that occurs at the edge of the groove after the collision between the tube and sleeve, resulting in significant plastic deformation. This strong shear is accompanied by a dramatic change in the stress state, as shown in
Figure 20a–d, where all four units in the deformation zone are in a free-expanding stress state before the collision. These units become a three-way compressive stress state after the collision with the sleeve, and from the point of time when the units collide with the sleeve, units A and B on the tube wall collide with the sleeve first, followed by unit D and finally unit C. This indicates that the process of embedding the tube in the trench is from the center of the trench first and gradually expands to the sides, resulting in a streamlined mesh, as shown in
Figure 20e, which is similar to the flow of metal in a forging process. This is consistent with the metallographic structure observed by the metallography microscope in
Section 3.1.3.
The variation of the strain state in the deformation zone is shown in
Figure 21. For the analysis of one element, the variation of its strain state is shown in
Figure 21a. The strain state of the deformation zone unit is in a plane strain state before the tube contacts the sleeve, with circumferential elongation, radial compression, and a negligible axial strain of almost zero, as shown in
Figure 21b. When the tube contacts the sleeve, the strain state in the deformation zone changes rapidly from a plane strain state in the free expansion phase to a three-way strain state: radial compression, axial elongation, and circumferential elongation. This illustrates the unique advantages of the EMP forming process in achieving local volume deformation of thin-walled tubes by tube forming, and the reasons for this are a matter for research.
There are two main reasons why the magnetic pulse forming process realizes the local volume deformation of the pipe in the form of pipe forming: one is the effect of the Lorentz force in the electromagnetic field, where the Lorentz force squeezes the pipe material into the groove. In the direct bulging process scheme, the pipe speed is only tens of meters per second, and this factor plays a major role.
The second scheme is to convert kinetic energy into deformation energy, which is especially obvious in the variable-gap electromagnetic bulging scheme. As shown in
Figure 22 setting the keyword can extract the energy change data in the process of tube magnetic-pulse forming. Under the condition of maintaining the discharge voltage at 6 kV, when the initial gap between the pipe and the casing is 0.11 mm, the kinetic energy of the pipe is low. When the pipe collides with the casing, the deformation energy increases slowly, which means that the pipe’s deformation energy increases slowly during the impact. The deformation energy is mainly provided by the Lorentz force. When the initial gap between the pipe and the casing increases to 1 mm, the kinetic energy of the pipe increases significantly, and when the pipe collides with the casing, the kinetic energy drops rapidly, and the deformation energy rises rapidly. At this time, the deformation energy of the pipe is mainly composed of transformed kinetic energy.
The transformation of kinetic energy into deformation energy is largely due to the inertial effect under high-speed impact. The velocity distribution of the pipe in the deformation zone was further analyzed. As shown in
Figure 23, six elements are selected in the deformation zone, among which elements 1 and 2 are in the non-grooved area, unit 3 is in the groove edge area, and units 4, 5, and 6 are in the groove area. It can be seen from
Figure 23b that in the free-bulging stage, the velocity of all units changes with time while the curves are basically the same. Before the collision, the radial velocity of the pipe element reaches 195.2 m/s. As the pipe collides with the pipe sleeve, the pipe enters the local deformation stage, and the element velocity changes significantly. Unit 1 and element 2 of the pipe first contact the pipe sleeve. After the collision, the speed drops rapidly. This kind of collision is an incomplete inelastic collision, which causes the velocity drop to become negative, that is, the velocity becomes reversed. Because unit 3 is located in the edge area of the groove, it can enter the groove through deformation, so its speed is higher than that of unit 1 and unit 2, and it falls more slowly. On the other hand, units 4, 5, and 6 in the groove area can be due to the inertia effect that continues to move into the groove. There is also an acceleration interval under the action of the Lorentz force, as shown in
Figure 23b, and under the action of the electromagnetic force, it continues to accelerate to the speed peaks until it comes into contact with the sleeve, and then its speed does not increase. As a result, the speed starts to drop rapidly, and it can be seen from the peak point in the figure that among the three units, the peak speed of unit 4 is the largest, followed by unit 5, and unit 6 is the smallest. This means that cell 6 contacts the socket first, cell 5 second, and cell 4 last.