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Dive into the research topics where Jae Ik Yoon is active.

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Featured researches published by Jae Ik Yoon.


Metals and Materials International | 2016

Factors governing hole expansion ratio of steel sheets with smooth sheared edge

Jae Ik Yoon; Jaimyun Jung; Hak Hyeon Lee; Gyosung Kim; Hyoung Seop Kim

Stretch-flangeability measured using hole expansion test (HET) represents the ability of a material to form into a complex shaped component. Despite its importance in automotive applications of advanced high strength steels, stretch-flangeability is a less known sheet metal forming property. In this paper, we investigate the factors governing hole expansion ratio (HER) by means of tensile test and HET. We correlate a wide range of tensile properties with HERs of steel sheet specimens because the stress state in the hole edge region during the HET is almost the same as that of the uniaxial tensile test. In order to evaluate an intrinsic HER of steel sheet specimens, the initial hole of the HET specimen is produced using a milling process after punching, which can remove accumulated shearing damage and micro-void in the hole edge region that is present when using the standard HER evaluation method. It was found that the intrinsic HER of steel sheet specimens was proportional to the strain rate sensitivity exponent and post uniform elongation.


npj Computational Materials | 2017

Continuum understanding of twin formation near grain boundaries of FCC metals with low stacking fault energy

Jaimyun Jung; Jae Ik Yoon; Jung Gi Kim; Marat I. Latypov; Jin You Kim; Hyoung Seop Kim

Deformation twinning from grain boundaries is often observed in face-centered cubic metals with low stacking fault energy. One of the possible factors that contribute to twinning origination from grain boundaries is the intergranular interactions during deformation. Nonetheless, the influence of mechanical interaction among grains on twin evolution has not been fully understood. In spite of extensive experimental and modeling efforts on correlating microstructural features with their twinning behavior, a clear relation among the large aggregate of grains is still lacking. In this work, we characterize the micromechanics of grain-to-grain interactions that contribute to twin evolution by investigating the mechanical twins near grain boundaries using a full-field crystal plasticity simulation of a twinning-induced plasticity steel deformed in uniaxial tension at room temperature. Microstructures are first observed through electron backscatter diffraction technique to obtain data to reconstruct a statistically equivalent microstructure through synthetic microstructure building. Grain-to-grain micromechanical response is analyzed to assess the collective twinning behavior of the microstructural volume element under tensile deformation. Examination of the simulated results reveal that grain interactions are capable of changing the local mechanical behavior near grain boundaries by transferring strain across grain boundary or localizing strain near grain boundary.Metals: grain neighbours influence twin formation during deformationGrains that should not favour twin formation exhibit twinning as a result of surrounding grains acting on their boundaries. A team led by HyoungSeop Kim at the Pohang University of Science and Technology in the Republic of Korea simulated the deformation of synthetic metallic microstructures with many grains of different orientations, based on steels that deform by both dislocation slip and twinning mechanisms. Twinning first started near grain boundaries and depended on initial grain orientation but, with further deformation, strong twin activity on one side of a boundary triggered strong twin activity on the other side of that boundary. This happened even when the grain on the other side of the boundary was unfavourable to twinning. Taking into account grain neighbourhood may therefore help in optimising twin-forming alloys.


Journal of Materials Science | 2017

Key factors of stretch-flangeability of sheet materials

Jae Ik Yoon; Jaimyun Jung; Jung Gi Kim; Seok Su Sohn; Sunghak Lee; Hyoung Seop Kim

Abstract Stretch-flangeability evaluated using hole-expansion testing represents the ability of sheet materials to resist edge fracture during complex shape forming. Despite a property imperative for automotive part applications of advanced high-strength steels, factors governing stretch-flangeability are not yet well understood. In this study, the mechanical properties of a selected group of materials with different microstructures were investigated using tensile, fracture toughness, and hole-expansion tests to find the factor governing the stretch-flangeability that is universally applicable to a variety of metallic materials. It was found that the fracture toughness of materials, measured using the fracture initiation energy, is a universal factor governing stretch-flangeability. We verified that fracture toughness is the key factor governing stretch-flangeability, showing that the hole-expansion ratio could be well predicted using finite element analysis associated with a simple ductile damage model, without explicitly taking into account the microstructural complexity of each specimen. This validates the use of the fracture toughness as a key factor of stretch-flangeability.


Metals and Materials International | 2018

Effect of target-fixture geometry on shock-wave compacted copper powders

Wooyeol Kim; Dong-Hyun Ahn; Jae Ik Yoon; Lee Ju Park; Hyoung Seop Kim

In shock compaction with a single gas gun system, a target fixture is used to safely recover a powder compact processed by shock-wave dynamic impact. However, no standard fixture geometry exists, and its effect on the processed compact is not well studied. In this study, two types of fixture are used for the dynamic compaction of hydrogen-reduced copper powders, and the mechanical properties and microstructures are investigated using the Vickers microhardness test and electron backscatter diffraction, respectively. With the assistance of finite element method simulations, we analyze several shock parameters that are experimentally hard to control. The results of the simulations indicate that the target geometry clearly affects the characteristics of incident and reflected shock waves. The hardness distribution and the microstructure of the compacts also show their dependence on the geometry. With the results of the simulations and the experiment, it is concluded that the target geometry affects the shock wave propagation and wave interaction in the specimen.


Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A-physical Metallurgy and Materials Science | 2018

Surface Abrasive Torsion for Improved Mechanical Properties and Microstructure

Ji Hyun Moon; Seung Mi Baek; Seok Gyu Lee; Jae Ik Yoon; Sunghak Lee; Hyoung Seop Kim

A novel process of discrete surface abrasion during simple torsion (ST), named “surface abrasive torsion (SAT),” is proposed to overcome the limitation of ST, i.e., insufficient strain for severe plastic deformation (SPD) due to cracks initiated on the surface, by removing the roughened surface region. The effect of SAT on delayed crack initiation was explained using finite element simulations. Larger shear deformation applicable to the specimen in SAT than ST was demonstrated experimentally.


Korean Journal of Metals and Materials | 2016

Obtaining Reliable True Plastic Stress-Strain Curves in a Wide Range of Strains Using Digital Image Correlation in Tensile Testing

Hyoung Seop Kim; Jae Ik Yoon; Jung Gi Kim; Jai Myun Jung; Dong Jun Lee; Hyeok Jae Jeong; Mehrdad Shahbaz; Sunghak Lee


Materials Letters | 2016

Correlation between fracture toughness and stretch-flangeability of advanced high strength steels

Jae Ik Yoon; Jaimyun Jung; Soo-Hyun Joo; Tae Jin Song; Kwang-Geun Chin; Min Hong Seo; Sung-Joon Kim; Sunghak Lee; Hyoung Seop Kim


Scripta Materialia | 2018

Single-roll angular-rolling: A new continuous severe plastic deformation process for metal sheets

Hak Hyeon Lee; Jae Ik Yoon; Hyoung Seop Kim


Computational Materials Science | 2017

Effect of coarse precipitates on surface roughening of an FCC polycrystalline material using crystal plasticity

Jaimyun Jung; Jae Ik Yoon; Ji Hyun Moon; Hyung Keun Park; Hyoung Seop Kim


Acta Materialia | 2017

Numerical analysis on the formation of P-orientation near coarse precipitates in FCC crystals during recrystallization

Jaimyun Jung; Jae Ik Yoon; Dong Nyung Lee; Hyoung Seop Kim

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Hyoung Seop Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Jaimyun Jung

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Sunghak Lee

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Seung Mi Baek

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Hak Hyeon Lee

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Jung Gi Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Hyung Keun Park

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Ji Hyun Moon

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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