Abstract
Increasing efficiency in raw material and energy usage is vital, even more in sectors, such as the hot forging industry, where material accounts for 50% of component price and energy costs are continuously rising. One of the methods to achieve this is to minimize material waste. Traditionally, high-quality gears for the automotive sector are machined to shape from forged preforms which is wasteful of both materials and energy. Attention has now turned to the forging of tooth gears by conventional forging. However, this could require high forging loads and therefore huge press sizes. Some gears may also be difficult to form due to the placement of their teeth. Forging of tooth gears is thus not a straightforward task. In this context, rotary forging is a powerful alternative. It uses incremental deformation locally with the material to achieve near net shape results, minimizing machining. Due to the reduction in contact, it also allows the forging load to be decreased substantially, resulting in smaller presses. This paper shows the development of the rotary forging process in combination with conventional forging to obtain crown gear teeth as a demonstration case. First, the hot conventional forging is shown, based on obtaining the rotary preform by a closed die forging operation. Then rotary forging is defined as a semi-finished operation to achieve the forged teeth. The objective is to reduce the initial billet weight, checking that folds and filling defects do not appear. A thermomechanical chained model has been developed based on FEM and experimental tests carried out in a pre-industrial environment. The prototypes result in increased yield from raw material (around 15% saving compared to machining) and they can be manufactured with less than 50% of the load required by conventional forging processes. Quality and metallographic requirements are also fulfilled.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | unknown |
| Editors | Pedro Arrazola, Eneko Saenz de Argandona, Nagore Otegi, Joseba Mendiguren, Mikel Saez de Buruaga, Aitor Madariaga, Lander Galdos |
| Publisher | American Institute of Physics Inc. |
| Pages | 40015 |
| Number of pages | 1 |
| Volume | 2113 |
| ISBN (Electronic) | 9780735418479 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2 Jul 2019 |
| Event | 22nd International ESAFORM Conference on Material Forming, ESAFORM 2019 - Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain Duration: 8 May 2019 → 10 May 2019 |
Publication series
| Name | 0094-243X |
|---|
Conference
| Conference | 22nd International ESAFORM Conference on Material Forming, ESAFORM 2019 |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | Spain |
| City | Vitoria-Gasteiz |
| Period | 8/05/19 → 10/05/19 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 9 Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure
Keywords
- Raw material
- Energy
- Efficiency
Project and Funding Information
- Funding Info
- This work was supported by the Basque Government under the CORONAT project (Hazitek program: IG2015/00331, ZL-2016/00070, ZL-2017/00109). The authors wish to thank FORGE ® NxT for their assistance on simulation methodology and INDUSTRIAS PUIGJANER S.A for use of the forging tool system developed.
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