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Concepts toTake Elastic Tool Deformations in Sheet Metal Forming into Account

In recent years the development of more and more niche products, i.e. cars with different external appearance, has become a remarkable trend in the automotive industry. This trend, however, generates higher costs for individual tooling geometries that are traditionally made as stiff as possible. A second trend is the increasing use of high and ultrahigh strength steel grades for bodies in white. Here too the design philosophy for the tools in sheet metal forming is based on a rather rigid and stiff tool approach. It is clear though, that a tremendous amount of money could be saved by designing the tools such, that their elastic deformation during the forming process is taken into account. This would lead to lighter and hence more inexpensive tools. The traditional approach to design the tool geometry by finite element simulations with rigid tools. Clearly, if elastic deformations are to be accounted for in such models, the assumption of a rigid tooling geometry needs to be abandoned. Here the straight forward approach would be to discretize the tool by a sufficiently accurate full 3D finite element model. Additionally the machine stiffness may be added to the model for completeness. Obviously this will lead to prohibitively increased computing time especially for large parts. A simple yet effective way to take the elastic deformations nonetheless into account is to condensate the discretized machine and tool geometry once and reuse it in subsequent simulations runs. The paper will discuss recent features in LS-DYNA® that allow the static condensation of elastic tool and machine geometries. Furthermore the application of the “deformable rigid bodies”- approach is shortly discussed.