摘要

Split sleeve cold expansion is a widely used process in the aerospace industry to enhance the fatigue life of rivet holes in the aircraft structures. In the experimental investigation presented in this article, the full-field in-plane residual strains and the out-of-plane surface deformations around open cold-expanded holes were measured using stereoscopic digital image correlation in aluminium specimens of two different thicknesses giving thickness-to-diameter ratios of 0.25 and 1. The results demonstrate that the mechanics of hole deformation is significantly different for the thick and thin specimens. The specimens of 1.6mm thickness underwent a combination of global bending and significant local warping during the cold expansion process. This localised warping caused a decrease in the minimum principal residual strains close to the edge of the hole, which cannot be predicted by the existing theoretical models as they do not account for the complex out-of-plane deformations that have a significant influence on the shape of the resulting residual strain profiles. In contrast, 6.35-mm-thick specimens did not bend globally mainly because of the higher second moment of area of their cross sections. The material close to the hole edge bulges out from both the faces of the specimen as a result of plastic deformation during the cold expansion process and the out-of-plane deformations are much more localised and lower in magnitude in comparison to the thin specimens. The plastic zone developed around the expanded hole is more axi-symmetric and larger in size for the thick specimens. These results imply that the existing split sleeve cold expansion process is not as effective in creating a uniform compressive residual elastic stress field around the fastener holes in thin as it is in the thick specimens.