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FR10_LTC AENIGME-I2M-UBx_Olivier Cahuc

Olivier CAHUC (UBx)

+33 646 554 653

olivier.cahuc@u-bordeaux.fr

https://www.i2m.u-bordeaux.fr/

Group description

The LTC AENIGME is an initiative between the Institute of Mechanics and Engineering of Bordeaux (I2M) and the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the Faculty of Engineering of Bilbao. It brings together researchers from UPV / EHU, UBx, ENSAM, INP Bordeaux.

The general theme of the LTC concerns the impact of sustainable processes on the preliminary design and in-service behavior of eco-components and structures.

The LTC activity involves all the upstream (process physical mechanisms and the behavior of matter) and downstream skills (design and industrialization) to provide tools for a greater use of sustainable processes while ensuring product quality from the perspective of the operating performance.

The LTC is thus organized around three main axes to develop the general theme outlined above:

(1) Sustainable and ecological design of components, structures, equipments and systems through and for sustainable manufacturing,

(2) Models and Processes for Sustainable Manufacturing,

(3) In service behavior of components or structures with strong gradients of properties.

The research line (1) focuses on bionic design, an interdisciplinary field which looks for inspiration in nature to provide solutions for design problems in different fields and various branches of industry such as Design, Aeronautics, Space Science, Automotive, Railways, Biomaterials… So, bionic design can be considered as a useful tool for generating concepts and developing products, which are visually pleasing and environmentally sustainable.

The research line (2) deals with machining by cutting or abrasive tools, magnetic pulse processes (welding and riveting) and additive manufacturing (SLM, LMD). These methods are manufacturing processes in extreme conditions of solicitation of the material and the tool. The originality and innovative nature of the research line concerns (i) the development of constitutive laws based on the material physical behavior (activity developed within the framework of the ITN Marie Curie “ENABLE” project; https://www.enable-project.com/), (ii) the tribology of the material/tool contact area taking into account the presence or not of a third body (based on DEM simulation), (iii) the development of fast and accurate simulation tools to model the manufacturing processes, based on a FEM solution including the strain gradient theory in large deformation, with parallel processors or High Performance Computing (ENABLE project), and (iv) the development of instrumented experimental means of process validation and characterization of components.

The research line (3) is characterized by the presence of strong gradients in the materials of the ecocomponents and concerns the development of (i) characterization techniques of these gradients, (ii) static and dynamic characterization as well as corrosion behavior of these parts, and (iii) relationships between process parameters, microstructure and in-service behavior properties.

Keywords

  • Machining
  • Magnetic pulse welding
  • Magnetic pulse riveting
  • Grinding
  • Microstructure
  • Fatigue behavior
  • Strain gradient theory
  • Process simulation
  • High Performance Computing
  • Industry 4.0

Team Description

  • Olivier CAHUC (Principal Investigator , RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling, RL3 : Real-time identification and control in machining)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9237-1244

  • Jérémie Girardot (Co-Principal Investigator, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes)

    ORCID: 0000-0003-3690-6464

  • Philippe DARNIS (Research staff, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling, RL3 : Real-time identification and control in machining)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9818-3535

  • Raynald LAHEURTE (Research staff, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9818-3535

  • Diego Luis BRITEZ GONZALEZ (Research staff, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9818-3535

  • Madalina CALAMAZ (Research staff, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes)

    ORCID: 0000-0003-0019-9841

  • Haythem ZOUABI (PHD Students with an active fellowship, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes)

  • Trunal Dhawale BHUJANGRAO (PHD Students with an active fellowship, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9325-2781

  • Danilo AMBROSIO (PHD Students with an active fellowship, RL1 : Advanced FEM simulation of manufacturing processes)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-9325-2781

  • Nicolas SAINTIER (Research staff, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0001-7738-5760

  • Jean-Luc BAROU (Research staff, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0002-3440-6549

  • Jean-Benoît KOPP (Research staff, RL2 : Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling)

    ORCID: 0000-0002-8062-8687

  • Jean-Yves K’NEVEZ (Research staff, RL3 : Real-time identification and control in machining)

    ORCID: 0000-0003-0310-0763

  • Stéphane VICTOR (Research staff, RL3 : Real-time identification and control in machining)

    ORCID: 0000-0002-0575-0383

Projects

  • ITN “ENABLE”

    Pl: O. Cahuc

    Funding Agency*: European

    Ongoing: yes

    Project reference: H2020-MSCA-ITN14/09

  • EFESO

    Pl: O. Cahuc

    Funding Agency*: Regional

    Ongoing: no

    Project reference: CRA2011603001

  • Plateforme Procédés Avancés

    Pl: O. Cahuc / M. Touzet

    Funding Agency*: Regional

    Ongoing: yes

    Project reference: 20191PFMO10201

  • U2MI

    Pl: O. Cahuc

    Funding Agency*: National

    Ongoing: no

    Project reference: 09 2 90 6447

  • Chargé de Mission Usine du Futur

    Pl: O. Cahuc

    Funding Agency*: UBx

    Ongoing: yes

* INT - International EU - European NAT - National RE - Regional

Publications

  • Trunal Bhujangrao, Fernando Veiga, Catherine Froustey, Sandra Guérard, Edurne Iriondo, Philippe Darnis, Franck Girot Mata, = Experimental characterization of the AA7075 aluminum alloy using hot shear compression test, Archives of Civil and Mechanical Engineering, 2021
    10.1007/s43452-021-00194-7

  • Zouabi H., Calamaz M., Wagner V., Cahuc O., Dessein G., = Kinematic Fields Measurement during Orthogonal Cutting Using Digital Images Correlation: A Review, International Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing, 2021
    10.3390/jmmp501000

  • Raffaele Russo, Franck Andrés Girot Mata, Dimitri Jacquin and Samuel Forest, = A review on strain gradient approaches in simulation of manufacturing processes, J. Manuf. Mater. Process, 2020
    10.3390/jmmp4030087

  • Ambrosio D., Wagner V., Garnier C., Jacquin D., Tongne A., Fazzini M., Cahuc O., Dessein G., = Influence of the welding parameters on defectiveness, thermal field and grain size in AA7075-T6 friction stir welds., Welding in the world, 2020
    10.1007/s40194-020-00869-4

  • L.Godino, I.Pombo, J.Girardot, J.A.Sanchez, I.Iordanoff, = Modelling the wear evolution of a single alumina abrasive grain: Analyzing the influence of crystalline structure, Journal of Materials Processing Technology, 2020
    10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2019.116464

Research Lines

DIGITAL AND CONNECTED FACTORY

Local strain and temperature fields generated in machined material during orthogonal cutting; experimental and numerical approaches.

Shaping processes are predominant to produce parts meeting specific requirements. Manufacturers need to optimize their production processes to meet the high demand for new products of greater value in terms of accessibility, quality, productivity and profitability.

Currently, the optimization of machining operations allowing to obtain, in addition to the geometry, the expected characteristics of the manufactured parts (roughness, residual stresses, metallurgical characteristics, etc.), is still done by trial and error while these properties have a considerable impact on the parts durability. For each new tool/workpiece material pair, instrumented machining tests must be carried out in order to determine the most suitable tool geometries and coatings, and the process parameters capable of ensuring the quality of the machined surfaces while reducing production costs.

Numerical simulation of machining is becoming an essential tool to access thermal fields, metallurgical characteristics and residual stresses, the durability of parts being conditioned by such quantities. Despite its potential in process optimization, numerical simulation of machining is not currently reliable. The scientific barriers to overcome concern the constitutive laws of engineered materials, the tribology of the processes, the development of fast and accurate numerical simulation and experimental validation through local strain and temperature field measurements.

This proposal is part of a larger project of the research team whose objective is to increase the predictive nature of machining simulations, thanks to an inverse identification of the material behavior and friction laws via:

- Measurements of macroscopic (cutting and feed forces, geometric characteristics of the chips, tool/chip and tool/material contact length) and mesoscopic quantities (strain and temperature fields in the main shearing areas of the machined materials) recorded during machining.

- Post mortem analysis on the machined surface (microstructure, residual stress measurements) and on the cutting tool (changes in its geometry with respect to wear).

The I2M got equipped with an experimental bench and optical system, including high magnification optics, lighting means, digital image processing facilities, etc…, allowing in-situ access to a large numbers of macroscopic and mesoscopic quantities, essential for the validation of numerical models.

The improvement of the system, developed during ENABLE project for measurement of local strain and temperature fields, is the main purpose of this post-doctoral research project. However, the experimental measurements cannot be disconnected from the numerical simulations. Indeed, the choice of the method for digital images processing is of highly importance because resulting strain and strain rate fields are to be compared with simulated one. Therefore, both numerical and experimental aspects need to be simultaneously addressed.

The work carried out during P. LIMJE's thesis (to be defended in December 2022), has improved the parameters identification of the TANH material behavior law, developed in the I2M laboratory, and thus extend its validity to a wider range of cutting conditions. Increasing the predictive capability of numerical simulation of machining by integrating both the latest advances in the optimization of the TANH behavior law (Limje et al., 2021) and recent developments in friction laws, is also one of the objectives of this post-doctoral research.

Scientific supervisors :

- Madalina CALAMAZ, MCF, I2M

- Olivier CAHUC, PU, I2M

Determination of a new friction law under severe conditions; experimental and numerical approaches.

During previous work at I2M laboratory (R. Laheurte Univ. de Bordeaux thesis, 2004), it was shown that in a situation of severe friction between two metal surfaces (i.e., the cutting face of a machining tool and the chip), some new phenomena appear and have been measured. Indeed, a Moment vector is measured and identified in addition to the Forces vector usually considered. The identification of this friction torsor, which is not considered in the usual friction laws used in numerical process simulation codes, makes it possible to improve the results obtained from these codes through the implementation of more relevant friction laws.

The work proposed in this Post Doctorate must make it possible to carry out new tests on a new friction bench equipped with numerous measurement devices that the Laboratory has recently been equipped with, as well as to implement in the finite elements of open simulation codes all the necessary elements to implement new conditions and contact laws in line with real phenomena.

The work will be carried out according to the following sequence.

The modelling of the aforesaid friction bench is fairly challenging. Indeed, the following aspects need to be properly addressed: large and localized deformations, elasto-visco-plasticity at large strains and accurate computations of contact pressures with advanced contact algorithms and acceptable computational times.

As previously stated, results obtained at I2M laboratory call for innovative friction and behavior laws: one must model couple stresses (i.e., stresses generating local torques) to accurately represent the experiments. This is not possible with classical continua. Cosserat continua, on the other hand, introduce microrotations of a material point associated with couple stresses. This is why these continua were extensively investigated during the ENABLE project led by Professor Cahuc. A machining-dedicated hardening law (the so-called TANH law) was successfully coupled with a Cosserat medium, the formulation of Cosserat elasto-visco-plasticity at large strains was achieved and the implementation in a HPC open-source finite element code (Fenics) was realized. Yet, friction between Cosserat media remains to be implemented and studied in transient dynamics. This represents quite a challenge since it requires to modify contact algorithms.

A two-step plan is proposed to achieve the aforesaid tasks. The demonstration that usual friction/behaviour laws fail to represent experiments will first be carried out. This demonstration can be made thanks to a classical commercial code (Abaqus). Improvements brought by Cosserat media will then be investigated. Several roads can be taken according to the post-doctoral student experience: i) implementation of Cosserat media in a commercial code (Abaqus) or ii) using the previously developed FEniCS code as a starting point. If modifying contact algorithms in Abaqus and FEniCS proves overly impractical, an in-house code developed by one of the advisors will be employed.

As we have seen previously, one of the the scientific barriers to overcome concern the tribology of the processes, the development of fast and accurate numerical simulation and experimental validation through local strain and temperature field measurements.

The objective of the experimental part of this proposal is to increase the predictive nature of friction simulations, thanks to an identification of the parameters of the new friction laws via:

Measurements of macroscopic (forces, moments, tool/chip and tool/material contact surface) and mesoscopic quantities (strain and temperature fields in the main shearing areas of the machined materials) recorded during machining.

Post-mortem analysis on the machined surface (microstructure, residual stress measurements) and on the cutting tool (changes in its geometry with respect to wear).

The I2M got equipped with an experimental bench and optical system, including high magnification optics, lighting means, digital image processing facilities, etc…, allowing in-situ access to a large numbers of macroscopic and mesoscopic quantities, essential for the validation of numerical models.

The improvement of the system, developed during ENABLE project for measurement of local strain and temperature fields, is an important purpose of this post-doctoral research project. However, the experimental measurements cannot be disconnected from the numerical simulations. Indeed, the choice of the method for digital images processing is of highly importance because resulting strain and strain rate fields are to be compared with simulated one. Therefore, both numerical and experimental aspects need to be simultaneously addressed.

Scientific supervisors

- Simon ESSONGUE-BOUSSOUGOU, MCF, I2M

- Olivier CAHUC, PU, I2M

SUSTAINABLE MANUFACTURING

Global multi-step manufacturing process modeling

  • In order to take into account the various manufacturing steps, the aim is to develop a global model of a forming process for a mechanical part. This model will integrate the environmental impact dimension of the whole process.
  • The ultimate goal is to control the whole manufacturing process by integrating the history of the part made (in a matter point of view), technical and environmental performance. Optimization of the execution scheme (choice of processes and operating parameters) can lead to the production of parts with equivalent technical performances but minimizing (controlling) the environmental impacts. Energy and materials consumptions, the follow-up of solid waste, liquid effluents and GHGs (linked to consumption of energy and non-processed raw material) can already be considered.
  • For example in aeronautic, some critical parts are forged, machined and then subjected to a shot blasting or heat treatment process. Models exist separately to represent each process and their environmental impact but not the interactions and especially the effect of one process on its next.
  • This approach requires very transversal skills combining mechanics, materials, processes and analysis of environmental impacts. Which tools, models and data of the two fields of expertise (processes and environmental impacts) are available and compatible to carry out these studies, or which gaps are to be filled, while maintaining a minimum level of the models and data necessary for which responses can be simulated and information returned can be used to choose alternative process and operating parameters.
  • Over of the last decades the computational capacity has evolved in a considerable way, the advances of numerical simulation models of manufacturing processes have accompanied this progress and evolved at the same time. Optimizations based on real time machinery and product flow big data acquisition are the main characteristic in the fourth industrial revolution era.  
  • Current scientific locks are related to the following questions:
    • Process point of view:
      • What is the influence of a process on its next (and possibly the cumulation of previous processes)?
      • How to optimize the parameters of the previous process to support the next one?
      • How to model and analyze the environmental impact of manufacturing processes with a representation and models derived from physic laws?
  • Environmental Assessment Perspective:
    • Which model (environmental impacts oriented) allows representing the process and its environmental impacts?
    • What is the relevance and availability of data in environmental databases of manufactured processes, and standardization of measurement methods?
    • How to take into account the environmental impacts of processes (adaptation of calculation methods) using a Life Cycle Assessment approach that is a product approach?
  • Numerical simulations help to reduce the number of experimental tests and to optimize independent and the global manufacturing chain process. They are also a tool to study the nature of the phenomena and changes that occur during plastic deformation and manufacturing processes.
  • The current work focuses on the problem of the processes interaction from a physical point of view, in order to follow the evolution of the material. When a different hardening rule is used, other state variables are required, which indeed will have a major influence for a multiple operations global process simulation.
  • In order to optimize a global manufacturing process it is necessary identify the variables that characterize the state of the each point of the material. This action will allow assuring the traceability of the process.
  • The aim is to study the influence of the hardening rule adopted in the formulation of the behavior law to evaluate its influence on the global manufacturing production. The main long-term goal of the scientific field of the activity is to model the behavior of the workpiece all along the manufacturing process. Taking into account that the actual strategy to control processes interaction is to eliminate undesirable internal stresses by annealing, gaining a prediction capacity would allow not only to control the processes parameters avoiding highly energetic operations but also a new tool to redesign the overall manufacturing process.

Cross-border Collaboration (if any)

The collaboration with UBx is materialized by the LTC AENIGME, an initiative between the Department of Mechanical Engineering of the Faculty of Engineering of Bilbao and the Institute of Mechanics and Engineering of Bordeaux. It brings together researchers from UPV / EHU, UBx, ENSAM, INP Bordeaux.

The aim of the LTC is to strengthen the strategic alliance between the Basque Country Campus of Excellence program “EUSKAMPUS” and Bordeaux Initiative of Excellence program “IdEx Bordeaux” by

developing innovative research lines in the areas of eco-design, sustainable processes and the sustainability of eco-products, compatible with the research strategies of the two entities,

increasing the participation of researchers from both entities in master courses developed by each site in order to promote among potential candidates to doctoral training the topics developed by the LTC,

(facilitating and promoting exchanges of researchers and students (masters or doctorate) and

sharing heavy investments, resources and knowledge.

During 2019 and 2020, the following main outcomes have been realized:

12 PUBLICATIONS IN Q1 JOURNALS, 1 BOOK CHAPTER

1 ITN MARIE SKLODOWSKA-CURIE IN PROGRESS

1 CO-TUTELLE PhD FINALISED, 3 RUNNING

1 COSUPERVISED PhD FINALISED, 3 RUNNING

1 INTERNATIONAL PhD FINALISED, 2 RUNNING

21 MONTHS OF MOBILITY REALIZED

3 WORKSHOPS ORGANISED FOR PhD STUDENTS (1 ONLINE)

60 HOURS OF SPECIFIC COURSES ORGANIZED (40 STUDENTS).