Performance of coated carbide tools in turning wood-based materials: Effect of cutting speeds and coating materials on the wear characteristics of coated carbide tools in turning wood-chip cement board

2001 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 342-349 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wayan Darmawan ◽  
Chiaki Tanaka ◽  
Hiroshi Usuki ◽  
Tadashi Ohtani
2010 ◽  
Vol 447-448 ◽  
pp. 806-810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiromasa Yamamoto ◽  
Kentaro Satake ◽  
Hiroyuki Sasahara ◽  
Toru Narita ◽  
Masaomi Tsutsumi ◽  
...  

In rotary cutting difficult-to-cut materials, less tool wear is observed at higher cutting speeds, contrary to the case of conventional single-point turning. In order to examine this characteristic feature of rotary cutting, this study focuses on the effects of cutting speed and tool peripheral speed on tool failure. Dry rotary cutting tests of stainless steel SUS304 were carried out using coated carbide tools. Cutting speeds were set at 100 m/min, the speed typically recommended for conventional turning, and 500 m/min. At 100 m/min, adhesions and subsequent chippings were observed on the cutting edges. Meanwhile, at 500 m/min the higher average temperature at the tool-workpiece contact area caused small wear spots, rather than adhesions at the optimized tool speed. Hence, for rotary cutting, a higher cutting speed is more effective in terms of both achieving several-times-higher productivity and reducing the amount of tool failure due to the difference of tool failure modes.


Author(s):  
Israel MARTINEZ ◽  
Ryutaro TANAKA ◽  
Yasuo YAMANE ◽  
Katsuhiko SEKIYA ◽  
Keiji YAMADA ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kyung-Hee Park ◽  
Patrick Y. Kwon

Face milling tests on AISI 1045 steel were performed to study the flank wear of multilayered coated carbide tools. The cutting tools were dual (TiN/TiAlN) and triple (TiN/Al2O3/TiCN) layered, coated carbide inserts processed by PVD and CVD respectively. As expected, the depth of cut (DOC) did not play an important role on the development of flank wear while the cutting speed had a significant role in the development of flank wear. Using confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and wavelet transform, the flank wear evolution was analyzed and abrasive wear was found to be a dominant tool wear mechanism. Adhesion of the work material was also observed after the carbide substrate was exposed. Edge chipping and micro-fracture were additional tool failure modes. After comparing the performance of the two inserts, we concluded that the dual layer coating was superior to the triple layer coating under various cutting conditions mainly due to the benefit coming from the coating processes themselves. It was claimed that the superior performance of the multilayer coating came from preventing the gross crack-induced removal of coating materials by propagating the fracture along the coating interfaces. However, no such observations were found in our milling experiment. Therefore, the hardness of the coating materials is the most important criteria for the development of flank wear.


2006 ◽  
Vol 7 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 201-206
Author(s):  
Ahsan Ali Khan, ◽  
Roshaliza Bt Hamidon, ◽  
Muhariyanti Bt Che Mat,

Author(s):  
Anshuman Das ◽  
Miyaz Kamal ◽  
Sudhansu Ranjan Das ◽  
Saroj Kumar Patel ◽  
Asutosh Panda ◽  
...  

AISI D6 (hardness 65 HRC) is one of the hard-to-cut steel alloys and commonly used in mould and die making industries. In general, CBN and PCBN tools are used for machining hardened steel but its higher cost makes the use for limited applications. However, the usefulness of carbide tool with selective coatings is the best substitute having comparable tool life, and in terms of cost is approximately one-tenth of CBN tool. The present study highlights a detailed analysis on machinability investigation of hardened AISI D6 alloy die steel using newly developed SPPP-AlTiSiN coated carbide tools in finish dry turning operation. In addition, a comparative assessment has been performed based on the effectiveness of cutting tool performance of nanocomposite coating of AlTiN deposited by hyperlox PVD technique and a coating of AlTiSiN deposited by scalable pulsed power plasma (SPPP) technique. The required number of machining trials under varied cutting conditions (speed, depth of cut, feed) were based on L16 orthogonal array design which investigated the crater wear, flank wear, surface roughness, chip morphology, and cutting force in hard turning. Out of the two cutting tools, newly-developed nanocomposite (SPPP-AlTiSiN) coated carbide tool promises an improved surface finish, minimum cutting force, longer tool life due to lower value of crater & flank wears, and considerable improvement in tool life (i.e., by 47.83%). At higher cutting speeds, the crater wear length and flank wear increases whereas the surface roughness, crater wear width and cutting force decreases. Chip morphology confirmed the formation of serrated type saw tooth chips.


Author(s):  
Mohd Hadzley Bin Abu Bakar ◽  
Anis Afuza Binti Azhar ◽  
Norfariza Binti Ab Wahab ◽  
umar al-amani azlan ◽  
MOHD FAIRUZ MOHD RASHID ◽  
...  

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