2017
DOI: 10.1007/s12289-017-1373-4
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Incremental forming of Cu-35Zn brass alloy

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Cited by 7 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The authors conclude that for brass, similar to other metals, the forming forces and the occurrence of fracture increase with the blank thickness increasing. Similar to their previous investigations, Fritzen et al, (2017) investigate 60/40 brass through an experimental approach, with three different values of step sizes and two tool diameters.…”
Section: Applying Isf To the Trumpet Bellmentioning
confidence: 91%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The authors conclude that for brass, similar to other metals, the forming forces and the occurrence of fracture increase with the blank thickness increasing. Similar to their previous investigations, Fritzen et al, (2017) investigate 60/40 brass through an experimental approach, with three different values of step sizes and two tool diameters.…”
Section: Applying Isf To the Trumpet Bellmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…A series of trials have been conducted by Fritzen et al (2013Fritzen et al ( , 2016Fritzen et al ( , 2017. In the first, Fritzen et al (2013) investigate SPIF of 70/30 brass alloy using an experimental approach to determine formability.…”
Section: Applying Isf To the Trumpet Bellmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In SPIF different materials like metals (Aerens et al, 2010), brass alloys (Fritzen et al, 2018), polymers (I. , shape-memory foams, sandwich panels, and composite materials have been formed which are used in different industries like medical implants (Isabel Bagudanch et al, 2015), transportation, automobile, and aerospace industries. Initial sheet thickness is a crucial parameter in SPIF and has significant effects on other parameters such as tool diameter, forming force, spring back, wall angle, wall thickness, thinning ratio forming height, and so on are affected by it (Dabwan et al, 2020;Han et al, 2013).…”
Section: Sheet Materialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most scientific work in this field, of single point incremental forming, are works that analyze experimentally or theoretically the main deformations occurring in the process (major strain, minor strain or thickness reduction) and the influence of the factors of geometric parameters (the die diameter, the vertical step, the type of trajectory) on these parameters, to metallic materials and their alloys. [2][3] Since the SPIF process has as its main disadvantage the low precision, several recent works have analyzed various possibilities to improve it by optimizing the die trajectories [4][5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%