1. Introduction
In hot strip rolling, the thickness profile and the residual stress (which leads to flatness defects) across the strip width are major quality concerns that adhere to increasingly tight tolerances. Excessive residual stress may cause strip breakages and limit the rolling speed and productivity; profile and flatness defects make subsequent processing difficult and degrade product performance. Profile and residual stress are usually attributed to the transverse variations in reduction and elongation in the roll bite. Moreover, two phenomena occurring in the interstand of a hot tandem mill can reshape profile and residual stress: one is the elastic recovery after the compression in the roll bite, and the other is the viscoplastic stress relaxation under high temperature. Therefore, to predict the entire evolution of the profile and residual stress during rolling, a reliable modeling strategy considering these interstand phenomena is needed. It would help to understand the evolutionary mechanisms and to develop corrective measures for the defects. However, most modeling efforts have been devoted to the deformation in the bite, as pointed out by Montmitonnet et al. [
1] in a review.
Usually, a strip model provides the rolling pressure distribution and is coupled with a roll stack model to calculate the thickness reduction in the vertical direction. It also predicts the elongation and the residual stress in the rolling direction. However, metal flow in the transverse direction (spread) is active in hot rolling and has a substantial influence on the transverse variations in reduction and elongation because the metal flows in all three directions are highly coupled. Therefore, plane strain models that ignore the spread cannot give a reliable prediction of profile and residual stress in hot rolling; a 3D model is necessary.
The finite element method (FEM) is widely used in a complex 3D rolling analysis because it has the advantage of being physically rich. In addition, some studies have noticed the effects of the interstand (pre-bite or post-bite) deformation. Kim et al. [
2] developed an FEM model to predict strip profile and reported that insufficient lengths of pre-bite or post-bite zones in the model leads to an erroneous prediction. Moazeni and Salimi [
3] studied the effect of nonuniform reduction on residual stresses using a commercial finite element package (ABAQUS/explicit). Similarly, they suggested that the simulation regime should extend far enough from the roll bite to obtain a steady solution for residual stress. Hacquin et al. [
4] built a steady-state FEM model and found that residual stress significantly reduces after changing the material behavior from elastic-plastic to elasto-viscoplastic (i.e., introducing stress relaxation). Based on an FEM hot rolling simulation of thick plate, Zaepffel et al. [
5] showed that the viscoplastic deformation could significantly modify the profile in the post-bite region. Legrand et al. [
6] predicted strip width variation with an FEM model and highlighted the increase of width due to post-bite elastic recovery. The above observations suggest that the interstand deformation is not negligible and there is a strong interaction between the interstand and the roll bite.
The computational costs of FEM models are generally high. Compared to the standard incremental Lagrangian formulation, the steady-state Eulerian and arbitrary Lagrangian–Eulerian techniques in rolling modeling can save CPU time, as reviewed by Fourment et al. [
7]. However, as the interstand regions in multi-stand hot rolling are to be modeled, the total computation is too heavy for the FEM even with current computational power. Therefore, an efficient modeling strategy is needed. A fast model can not only analyze tandem rolling but also run massive parametric campaigns for industrial process optimization.
Different methods have been used to develop fast models for the roll bite deformation, which are the basis of the interstand analysis. They usually neglect elasticity or simplify variations in the vertical direction (often referred to as ‘quasi-3D’). Johnson [
8] reduced the governing equations for thin strip rolling by an asymptotic analysis and derived an analytical solution of spread. Dixon and Yuen [
9] developed a real-time model based on the asymptotic techniques to predict the tension and transverse strain at the exit of the roll bite. Liu et al. [
10] obtained the stress fields using a hybrid model of the upper bound method and finite difference method (FDM), assuming the transverse flow had a polynomial pattern along the rolling direction. Ngo [
11] built an online width variation model based on the upper bound method with the assumed polynomial velocity field. Tozawa et al. [
12] solved the stress field and metal flow problems based on the FDM, assuming that stresses are constant through the thickness; however, the convergence of the solution is sensitive to the strip width and the initial guess of the spread. Later, they simplified the model by introducing a linear relationship between the transverse and longitudinal strains for application to a wider strip [
13]. Yao et al. [
14] proposed an FDM model with a global iterative solution to predict the distributions of spread, tension, and rolling pressure; the model is robust for typical wide strip hot rolling without the transverse strain simplification.
Some efforts have been made to develop a fast interstand model. The conventional ribbon model proposed by Shohet and Townsend [
15] is widely used as a complement to the roll bite model; the post-bite strip is treated as a system of elastic narrow ribbons interconnected at the ends to estimate the residual stress caused by nonuniform elongation. However, the stress in a ribbon segment is assumed to be constant. Lee et al. [
16] modeled the plastic yielding of the ribbon segment under excessive stress to predict the corresponding changes of profile and residual stress in the interstand. Cresdee et al. [
17] introduced a viscoplastic creep model without yield stress into the ribbon segment and divided the interstand into several zones along the rolling direction where the increments of creep strain and the resulting stress relaxation were calculated. Milenin et al. [
18] simulated the stress relaxation in a similar way to study the residual stress of hot rolled strips during laminar cooling. Nevertheless, only longitudinal stress may occur in these ribbon models, neglecting transverse stress and shear stress. Domanti et al. [
19] derived a purely elastic plane stress formulation for a moving strip in the interstand and found an analytical solution for the stress decay with assumed boundary conditions. If coupled with a roll bite model, this model has the potential to predict the residual stress evolution under elastic recovery. Kim et al. [
20] considered the pre-bite region in a reduced model with parameters calibrated by the FEM and suggested that a small amount of pre-bite plastic deformation may affect the distributions of tension and rolling pressure. In the online shape control system of hot rolling, Zhao et al. [
21] calculated the interstand change of shape and crown with an empirical coefficient for stress relaxation; the value of the coefficient relies on experimental data or simulation results.
Generally, in fast models, the roll bite module neglects the elasticity and therefore cannot provide reliable elastic and plastic strain for the residual stress calculation. The interstand module is not sophisticated enough to describe both elastic recovery and stress relaxation. Moreover, the interaction between the two modules is insufficiently modeled, neglecting the influence of the post-bite deformation on the roll bite.
The lack of suitable models limits investigations on the interstand phenomena. Therefore, the aim of the present research is: to develop a fast model that can predict the interstand evolutions of profile and residual stress and that can handle the heavy simulations of hot tandem rolling with different configurations; to analyze the evolutionary mechanisms under the effects of interstand elastic recovery and stress relaxation, and to examine how these effects change from the upstream to the downstream stands.
In
Section 2, to reduce the calculation complexity while preserving the essential physics of the problem, the governing equations of elastic–viscoplastic rolling deformation are determined based on the quasi-3D approximation; for efficiency and robustness, a global iterative solution with linearization is carried out based on the FDM. In
Section 3, simplified tandem rolling conditions (two stands) are simulated by both the new strip model and an FEM model for validation, and the effects of elastic recovery are studied. In
Section 4, the new strip model is complemented with both a roll stack model and a calibrated material model to simulate an industrial experiment of hot rolling (seven stands), and the predicted and measured profiles are compared; the effects of stress relaxation on the evolutions of profile and residual stress are analyzed. Discussion of the results is in
Section 5.
5. Discussion
We have developed an elasto-viscoplastic finite-difference rolling model that can predict the entire evolutions (including the interstand regions) of profile and residual stress. The calculation time of a seven-stand hot tandem rolling is approximately 1 min, making multi-pass and multi-case simulation feasible. To achieve a balance between accuracy and efficiency, the key modeling strategies are as follows.
Quasi-3D approximation. Simplification along the vertical direction allows reducing the governing equations and meshing only in the rolling and transverse directions, greatly alleviating the computational complexity. On the one hand, this approximation has a theoretical foundation from asymptotic analysis [
8]. On the other hand, similar approximations have been adopted by many fast models for hot and cold strip rolling since the development of the classic slab method [
28]. The results in the present research also validate the quasi-3D approximation for predicting profile and the transverse distribution of residual stress in the hot finishing mill. However, the quasi-3D approximation will fail in a hot roughing mill or a cold temper mill where thickness reductions are small and the deformation is highly nonuniform throughout the thickness, as suggested by Montmitonnet [
29].
Steady-state formulation. Compared to the standard incremental formulation in a commercial FE package, the steady-state formulation allows mesh refinement only near the roll bite, so the number of elements is significantly reduced. This is important when the long interstand regions are considered.
Decoupling of multi-stand rolling. The assumption of the interstand steady region with uniform velocity implies that the uneven elastic stress field caused by the roll bite in one stand cannot reach beyond the steady region due to decay (elastic recovery), and therefore, it will not affect the upstream stand. As a result, the system of multi-stand rolling, which is too large to be solved as a whole, can be decoupled. The classic Saint Venant’s principle suggests the decay length is of the order of the strip width, and Domanti et al. [
19] agreed based on their analytical solution. Based on the results in
Figure 6 and
Figure 9, the decay length is about 1.5 times the width. Therefore, this is a proper assumption for the typical hot tandem rolling mill studied in
Section 4, in which the length between two adjacent stands is 5.5 m, long enough for stress decay.
Global iterative solution with linearization. In the conventional finite difference model proposed by Tozawa et al. [
12], the nonlinear governing equations were solved successively from the edge elements to the center elements; this procedure might produce false values and cause failure. In the previous roll bite model [
14], the governing equations were linearized to form a global system of equations that considered most boundary conditions simultaneously and could be solved robustly and efficiently in iterations. Based on the same solution technique, the present model can be seen as an extension of the previous model, from the rigid plastic behavior to the elasto-viscoplastic, from the roll bite region to the interstand. A similar solution is found in a meshless model for bar rolling [
30], where the material properties are linearized during each iteration. Allwood [
31] also proposed an efficient global solution of nonlinear equations in a 2.5D rolling model; however, no mathematical details about the algorithm were given for further understanding.
It is found that elastic recovery is the transition from the high-pressure roll bite to the interstand steady region, during which the transverse compressive stress releases and longitudinal velocity tends to be uniform. During this transition, the residual stress is gradually revealed from the exit tension after a significant pattern change (140 MPa to −30 MPa at the edge and −40 MPa to 10 MPa at the center for the flat roll case in
Figure 8). Correspondingly, the residual stress can be expressed as a function of the longitudinal stress, the transverse stress, and the longitudinal velocity at the roll bite exit (Equation (37)) if only elastic deformation is considered in the interstand (in cold rolling for example). Equation (37) may serve as a simplified interstand module for the roll bite module to estimate the residual stress. Compared to the ribbon model proposed by Shohet and Townsend [
15], Equation (37) provides richer elastic physics.
It is worth noting that, even if the reduction in the roll bite is uniform along the width, there is residual stress of −30 MPa at the edge in the interstand steady region (the flat roll case in
Figure 8). Similarly, Moazeni and Salimi [
3] found that there is an edge wave trend with the uniform reduction in their FEM simulation. However, the conventional plane strain theory will suggest no residual stress for the same condition, as the effects of transverse metal flow and elastic recovery are neglected.
It is found that the stress relaxation increases the edge drop of the profile directly in the interstand region in hot tandem rolling but decreases the center crown indirectly by changing the distributions of tension and rolling pressure in the roll bite. The indirect effect indicates a strong coupling relationship between the interstand and the roll bite; fast models often neglect this relationship and calculate these two regions separately. To the best knowledge of the authors, few studies have been conducted to simulate hot tandem rolling and analyze the effect of stress relaxation on the profile.
If stress relaxation is ignored, the profile error increases (from 10% to 25% in crown
C40 in F7, as shown in
Figure 15b), and the pattern of residual stress changes (a false tensile residual stress appears at the edge in the downstream stands instead of the original compressive stress, as shown in
Figure 16a–c). These errors indicate that it is necessary to consider stress relaxation in the online shape control model in industry.
From the purely elastic analyses (
Figure 9) and those considering viscoplasticity (
Figure 16), we can see that elastic recovery sets the basic pattern for the interstand stress field, while the stress relaxation works conditionally: its effect is more evident under high stress (existing at the edge region near the roll bite) and under high temperatures and long interstand passing times (corresponding to the upstream stands). Both phenomena are necessary to obtain reliable evolutions of profile and residual stress in hot strip rolling.
In addition to elastic recovery and stress relaxation, elastic buckling (manifest flatness defects) may also occur in the interstand under excessive compressive residual stress and insufficiently imposed tension. Abdelkhalek et al. [
32] introduced a buckling criterion into an FEM model for cold rolling. They found that post-bite buckling has little influence on the roll bite deformation because it occurs beyond the region (whose length is about half the strip width) adjacent to the roll bite. On the contrary, elastic recovery and stress relaxation are intense near the roll bite (causing stress decay), so buckling should have limited influence on them. As a result, manifest flatness defects could be evaluated based on the predicted interstand residual stress in a decoupled way.
A combined validation based on both the FEM model and the measured profiles in the industrial experiment is carried out in this research. Comparisons with more experimental or industrial data (especially for the residual stress) are required for further assessment of the model.
The Sellars and Tegart constitutive model is used in this research because it can cover both the low-stress behavior in the interstand (particularly the stress decay region near the roll bite) and the high-stress behavior in the roll bite. However, the new model is open to various constitutive models as long as they provide a relationship between the equivalent stress and the equivalent strain rate. Sophisticated physical-based models, which consider microstructure evolution including recrystallization and recovery, can be coupled with the new model to study the interactions between stresses, geometry, and microstructure.
The iterative algorithm with relaxation factor is used for stability when solving the coupled system of strip and roll stack; however, it will cost more iterations and CPU time. One possible solution is to linearize and discretize the governing equations of roll deformation similar to the strip model and solve the strip-roll system as a whole. It should further increase efficiency, making online applications possible.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, C.Y. and A.H.; methodology, C.Y. and J.S.; software, C.Y.; validation, C.Y., J.Z., and G.Z.; formal analysis, C.Y. and A.H.; investigation, J.Z. and G.Z.; resources, A.H.; writing—original draft preparation, C.Y. and J.S.; writing—review and editing, H.L. and Y.Q.; visualization, C.Y.; supervision, J.S.; funding acquisition, A.H. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (51674028); the Innovative Method Project of Ministry of Science and Technology of China (2016IM010300); and the Guangxi Special Funding Program for Innovation-Driven Development (GKAA17202008).
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to express their gratitude towards Chao Liu and Fanfu Kong for their technical support.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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Figure 1.
Model domain: (a) decoupling of tandem rolling; (b) different deformation zones in a stand; (c) top view with streamline of metal flow and the lengths of the entrance loading zone (lB) and the exit unloading zone (lD).
Figure 2.
Element extracted from the roll bite.
Figure 3.
(a) Meshing of the calculation domain (top view), and (b) element centers (hollow points) and nodes (solid points).
Figure 4.
Calculation flow chart.
Figure 5.
Illustration of the finite element method (FEM) rolling model with the contact pressure in the first roll bite.
Figure 6.
Variations in half strip width during two-stand rolling from both the new finite difference method (FDM) model and the FEM reference model.
Figure 7.
Evolutions of thickness profile from both the new FDM model and the FEM reference model.
Figure 8.
Evolutions of longitudinal stress (residual stress) from both the new FDM model and the FEM reference model.
Figure 9.
(a) Longitudinal stress field, (b) transverse stress field, and (c) the longitudinal velocity at the center and the edge in the first stand from the new FDM model.
Figure 10.
Experiment strip and measuring points.
Figure 11.
(a) Experiment specimens and (b) procedure of the hot compression test.
Figure 12.
Correlation between the measured and predicted flow stresses.
Figure 13.
Illustration of the coupled calculation between the strip model and the roll stack model.
Figure 14.
Strip profiles at the downstream interstand steady region of each stand in tandem rolling: measurements, and predictions with/without stress relaxation.
Figure 15.
Prediction errors with/without stress relaxation: (a) root mean square error of the whole profile; (b) relative error of crown C40.
Figure 16.
Predictions of longitudinal stress (a–c), rolling pressure (d–f), and profile (g–i) in F1, F4, and F7 (with/without stress relaxation).
Table 1.
Chemical composition of the HP295 steel.
Composition | C | Si | Mn | P | S | Al |
---|
wt (%) | 0.16 | 0.06 | 0.78 | 0.013 | 0.011 | 0.025 |
Table 2.
Rolling parameters in the experiment (the transfer bar has a thickness of 42.57 mm and a width of 1158 mm).
Stand Number | F1 | F2 | F3 | F4 | F5 | F6 | F7 |
---|
Exit thickness (mm) | 22.91 | 13.02 | 8.32 | 5.68 | 4.18 | 3.16 | 2.67 |
Rolling force (kN) | 22,425 | 19,074 | 17,825 | 15,474 | 13,157 | 11,524 | 8775 |
Bending force (kN/chock) | 300 | 800 | 792 | 705.5 | 809 | 570 | 889 |
Strip temperature (°C) | 1034 | 994 | 970 | 956 | 946 | 933 | 917 |
Roll speed (m/s) | 0.89 | 1.56 | 2.37 | 3.46 | 4.72 | 6.25 | 7.58 |
Work roll radius (mm) | 398 | 384 | 381 | 375 | 333 | 314 | 342 |
Friction coefficient μ | 0.269 | 0.227 | 0.251 | 0.242 | 0.287 | 0.278 | 0.301 |
Table 3.
Flow stresses under different temperatures and strain rates.
Temperature (°C) | Strain Rate (s−1) | Flow Stress (MPa) |
---|
900 | 0.01 | 77.7 |
900 | 0.1 | 127.8 |
900 | 1 | 172.3 |
900 | 10 | 222.1 |
950 | 0.01 | 62.7 |
950 | 0.1 | 104.7 |
950 | 1 | 145.5 |
950 | 10 | 185.2 |
1000 | 0.01 | 52.5 |
1000 | 0.1 | 86.8 |
1000 | 1 | 122.7 |
1000 | 10 | 163.0 |
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