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Author

Neil Krishnan

Other affiliations: University of New Hampshire
Bio: Neil Krishnan is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microextrusion & Grain size. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 438 citations. Previous affiliations of Neil Krishnan include University of New Hampshire.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an experimental setup consisting of forming assembly and a loading stage has been developed to obtain the force-displacement response for the extrusion of brass made of brass (Cu/Zn: 70/30).
Abstract: Microforming is a relatively new realm of manufacturing technology that addresses the issues involved in the fabrication of metallic microparts, i.e., metallic parts that have at least two characteristic dimensions in the sub-millimeter range. The recent trend towards miniaturization of products and technology has produced a strong demand for such metallic microparts with extremely small geometric features and high tolerances. Conventional forming technologies, such as extrusion, have encountered new challenges at the microscale due to the influence of "size effects" that tend to be predominant at this length scale. One of the factors that of interest is friction. The two companion papers investigate the frictional behavior and size effects observed during microextrusion in Part I and in a stored-energy Kolsky bar test in Part II. In this first paper, a novel experimental setup consisting of forming assembly and a loading stage has been developed to obtain the force-displacement response for the extrusion of pins made of brass (Cu/Zn: 70/30). This experimental setup is used to extrude pins with a circular cross section that have a final extruded diameter ranging from 1.33 mm down to 570 μm. The experimental results are then compared to finite-element simulations and analytical models to quantify the frictional behavior. It was found that the friction condition was nonuniform and showed a dependence on the dimensions (or size) of the micropin under the assumption of a homogeneous material deformation. Such assumption will be eliminated in Part II where the friction coefficient is more directly measured. Part I also investigates the validity of using high-strength/low-friction die coatings to improve the tribological characteristics observed in micro-extrusion. Three different extrusion dies coated with diamondlike carbon with silicon (DLC-Si), chromium nitride (CrN), and titanium nitride (TiN) were used in the microextrusion experiments. All the coatings worked satisfactorily in reducing the friction and, correspondingly, the extrusion force with the DLC-Si coating producing the best results.

114 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the Reproducing Kernel Element Method (RKEM) was used to simulate the microextrusion problem, and the effect of grain size was investigated by using workpieces heat treated to produce grain sizes varying from 32 μm up to 211 μm.
Abstract: Microforming using a small machine (or so-called desktop machine) is an alternative new approach to those using full-size heavy equipment for manufacturing microparts. Microparts are commonly defined as parts or structures with at least two dimensions in the submillimeter range, which are used extensively in electronics and micromechanical products. However when scaling down a conventional forming process to microscale, the influence of the so-called size effect needs to be considered. The individual microstructure (size, shape, and orientation of grains) and the interfacial conditions show a significant effect on the process characteristics. In this paper, the process of extrusion is investigated to establish it as a viable process for microforming. A forming assembly is fabricated and used in conjunction with a loading substage to extrude micropins with a final diameter of I mm. The effect of grain size is investigated by using workpieces heat treated to produce grain sizes varying from 32 μm up to 211 μm. Two extrusion dies with different roughness are used to study the effect of surface finish. While experiments lead to interesting questions and new discoveries, theoretical or numerical solutions are necessary tools for process optimization. Here, knowing the limits of the current widely used numerical simulation tools [i.e., the Finite Element Method (FEM)], a new method, the Reproducing Kernel Element Method (RKEM), has recently been developed to address the limitations of the FEM (for example, remeshing issue), while maintaining FEM's advantages, e.g., the polynomial reproducing property and function interpolation property. The new RKEM method is used to simulate the microextrusion problem. Its results are compared with that obtained from the FEM and the experiment result. Satisfactory results were obtained. Future directions on the experimental and simulation work are addressed.

111 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, results from microhardness tests and microstructure analyses for both grain sizes are presented to investigate this phenomenon and to characterize the deformation during microextrusion.
Abstract: Microextrusion has recently emerged as a feasible manufacturing process to fabricate metallic micropins having characteristic dimensions on the order of less < 1 mm. At this length scale, the deformation of the workpiece is dominated by the so-called size effects, e.g., material property and frictional behavior variations at small length scales. In extrusion experiments performed to produce submillimeter-sized pins having a base diameter of 0.76 mm and an extruded diameter of 0.57 mm, the extruded pins exhibited a curving tendency when a workpiece with a relatively coarse grain size of 211 μm was used. This phenomenon was not observed when workpieces with a finer grain size of 32 μm were used. In this paper, results from microhardness tests and microstructure analyses for both grain sizes are presented to investigate this phenomenon and to characterize the deformation during microextrusion. The results obtained from this analysis show that as the grain size approaches the specimen feature size, the deformation characteristics of the extruded pins are dominated by the size and location of specific grains, leading to a nonuniform distribution of plastic strain and measured hardness and, thus, the curving tendency. Microhardness tests of the initial billet material and tensile test specimens are also presented as supplementary analyses.

64 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a non-orthogonal material model is used to simulate the hemispherical thermo-stamping of a plain weave composite sheet and the temperature effect is taken into account by modifying the equivalent material properties for the composite sheet based on the contact status between the tooling and the blank.

45 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the results of experiments conducted to investigate the friction coefficient existing at a brass-steel interface are presented, and the main conclusion of these experiments was that the friction coefficients did not show any significant dependence on the material grain size, interface pressure, or area of contact.
Abstract: In this paper, the results of experiments conducted to investigate the friction coefficient existing at a brass-steel interface are presented. The research discussed here is the second of a two-part study on the size effects in friction conditions that exist during microextrusion. In the regime of dimensions of the order of a few hundred microns, these size effects tend to play a significant role in affecting the characteristics of microforming processes. Experimental results presented in the previous companion paper have already shown that the friction conditions obtained from comparisons of experimental results and numerical models show a size effect related to the overall dimensions of the extruded part, assuming material response is homogeneous. Another interesting observation was made when extrusion experiments were performed to produce submillimeter sized pins. It was noted that pins fabricated from large grain-size material 211 m showed a tendency to curve, whereas those fabricated from billets having a small grain size 32 m, did not show this tendency. In order to further investigate these phenomena, it was necessary to segregate the individual influences of material response and interfacial behavior on the microextrusion process, and therefore, a series of frictional experiments was conducted using a stored-energy Kolsky bar. The advantage of the Kolsky bar method is that it provides a direct measurement of the existing interfacial conditions and does not depend on material deformation behavior like other methods to measure friction. The method also provides both static and dynamic coefficients of friction, and these values could prove relevant for microextrusion tests performed at high strain rates. Tests were conducted using brass samples of a small grain size 32 m and a large grain size 211 m at low contact pressure 22 MPa and high contact pressure 250 MPa to see whether there was any change in the friction conditions due to these parameters. Another parameter that was varied was the area of contact. Static and dynamic coefficients of friction are reported for all the cases. The main conclusion of these experiments was that the friction coefficient did not show any significant dependence on the material grain size, interface pressure, or area of contact. DOI: 10.1115/1.2738131

43 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The trellis-frame (picture-frame) and bias-extension tests for both balanced and unbalanced fabrics have been conducted and compared through this collaborative effort.
Abstract: Textile composites made of woven fabrics have demonstrated excellent mechanical properties for the production of high specific-strength products. Research efforts in the woven fabric sheet forming are currently at a point where benchmarking will lead to major advances in understanding both the strengths and the limitations of existing experimental and modeling approaches. Test results can provide valuable information for the material characterization and forming process design of woven composites if researchers know how to interpret the results obtained from varying test methods appropriately. An international group of academic and industry researchers has gathered to design and conduct benchmarking tests of interest to the composite sheet forming community. Shear deformation is the dominative deformation mode for woven fabrics in forming; therefore, trellis-frame (picture-frame) and bias-extension tests for both balanced and unbalanced fabrics have been conducted and compared through this collaborative effort. Tests were conducted by seven international research institutions on three identical woven fabrics. Both the variations in the setup of each research laboratory and the normalization methods used to compare the test results are presented and discussed. With an understanding of the effects of testing variations on the results and the normalization methods, numerical modeling efforts can commence and new testing methods can be developed to advance the field.

558 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review on size effects in manufacturing of metallic components is presented, where the typology of size effects is explained, followed by a description of size effect on strength and tribology, and last three sections describe size effects on formability, forming processes and cutting processes.

381 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the worldwide technical developments and state-of-the-art of electro-physical and chemical micromachining processes and issues related to the supporting technologies such as standardization, metrology and equipment design are briefly assessed.

358 citations

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TL;DR: The state of the art in scientific research concerning tailored blanks can be found in this article, where the authors present the potentials of the technology and chances for further scientific investigations.

351 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A compendium of metal forming keynotes can be found in this paper, where the authors of each keynote have written an update with new information that has developed since the writing of the keynote.
Abstract: Considerable changes have occurred in metal forming in the last decade. A record of these changes can be found in keynote papers presented by the members of the Scientific Technical Committee—Forming, at the CIRP Annual General Meeting each year. The keynote papers are excellent references on important developments in metal forming and are used as a reference, globally. Not only is this paper a compendium of most of the keynotes presented, but from 2001 onward, it has updates on new information on five keynote subject areas. The authors of each keynote have written an update with new information that has developed since the writing of the keynote. The authors of each section are shown in order of presentation.

222 citations