This study introduced a pre-holed hot clinching process for hot stamping patchwork blanks, using the lower sheet pre-hole as a forming cavity to facilitate material flow and minimize deformation resistance. Evaluated through mechanical testing and finite element analysis (FEA), the process induced ausforming and maintained material homogeneity (~500 HV), and an optimal interfacial gap up to 10 mm effectively prevented localized soft-zone fractures. Results identified interfacial slip, driven by a critical differential surface expansion rate, as the primary mechanism for geometric anchoring and solid-state bonding. Experimental validation established optimal joining at a 60% penetration ratio and a 0.9 hole-to-punch diameter ratio. While prior studies on forge joining reported average maximum strengths limited to 1.2 kN due to the absence of a mechanical hook, the optimized pre-holed joints in this work achieved a superior tensile shear capacity of 11.5 kN. Furthermore, the cross-tension load reached 0.77 kN, representing a nearly tenfold increase compared to the 0.08 kN observed in the no-hole with offset condition. These results demonstrate that the pre-holed hot clinching method significantly enhances joint integrity while reducing the forming load from 70 kN without a pre-hole to 12 kN with a 10 mm pre-hole.
Charoensuk et al. (Tue,) studied this question.