Investigations of critical cutting speed and ductile-to-brittle transition mechanism for workpiece material in ultra-high speed machining

2015 ◽  
Vol 104 ◽  
pp. 44-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bing Wang ◽  
Zhanqiang Liu ◽  
Guosheng Su ◽  
Qinghua Song ◽  
Xing Ai
1998 ◽  
Vol 120 (1) ◽  
pp. 169-172 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Sutter ◽  
A. Molinari ◽  
L. Faure ◽  
J. R. Klepaczko ◽  
D. Dudzinski

A new high speed machining experiment is designed to obtain orthogonal cutting in a wide range of cutting speeds from 7 m/s to 100 m/s. Quasi-stationary cutting conditions are obtained. The measurement of the longitudinal cutting force reveals the existence of an optimal cutting speed for which the energy consumption is minimum. The genuine tool-workpiece material interaction can be analyzed with that experimental device.


Author(s):  
Muataz Al Hazza ◽  
Khadijah Muhammad

High speed machining has many advantages in reducing time to the market by increasing the material removal rate. However, final surface quality is one of the main challenges for manufacturers in high speed machining due to the increasing of flank wear rate. In high speed machining, the cutting zone is under high pressure associated with high temperature that lead to increasing of the flank wear rate in which affect the final quality of the machined surface. Therefore, one of the main concerns to the manufacturer is to predict the flank wear to estimate and predict the surface roughness as one of the main outputs of the machining processes. The aim of this study is to determine experimentally the optimum cutting parameters: depth of cut, cutting speed (Vc) and feed rate (f) that maintaining low flank wear (Vb). Taguchi method has been applied in this experiment. The Taguchi method has been universally used in engineering analysis.  JMP statistical analysis software is used to analyse statically the development of flank wear rate during high speed milling of hardened steel AISI D2 to 60 HRD. The experiment was conducted in the following boundaries: cutting speed 200-400 m/min, feed rate of 0.01-0.05 mm/tooth and depth of cut of 0.1-0.2 mm. Analysis of variance ANOVA was conducted as one of important tool for statistical analysis. The result showed that cutting speed is the most influential input factors with 70.04% contribution on flank wear.


2017 ◽  
Vol 889 ◽  
pp. 84-89
Author(s):  
Pandithevan Ponnusamy ◽  
Mullapudi Joshi

In high speed machining, to dynamically control the mechanical behaviour of the materials, it is essential to control temperature, stress and strain by appropriate speed, feed and depth of cut. In the present work, to predict the mechanical behaviour of Ti6Al4V and 316L steel bio-materials an explicit dynamic analysis with different cutting speeds was carried out. Orthogonal cutting of 316L steel and Ti6Al4V materials with 720 m/min, 900 m/min and 1200 m/min cutting speeds was performed, and the distribution of stress and temperature was investigated using Jonson-Cook material model. Additionally, the work aimed at determining the effect of cutting speed on work piece temperature, when cutting is carried out continuously. From the investigation, it was found that, while machining Ti6Al4V material, for the increase in cutting speed there was increase in tool-chip interface temperature. Specifically, this could found till the cutting speed 900 m/min. But, there was a decrease in tool-chip interface temperature for the increase in speed from 900 m/min to 1200 m/min. Similarly for 316L steel, the tool-chip interface temperature increased when increasing the cutting speed till 900 m/min. But reduction in temperature from 650 °C to 500 °C for steel and 1028 °C to 990 °C for Ti6Al4V were found, when the cutting speed increased from 900 m/min to 1200 m/min. The study can be used to conclude, at what temperature range the adoption of material with controlled shape and geometry is possible for potential applications like, prosthetic design and surgical instruments prior to fabrications.


Author(s):  
Roman V. Kazban ◽  
James J. Mason

Even though many models for machining exist, most of them are for low-speed machining, where momentum is negligible and material behavior is well approximated by quasi-static plastic constitutive laws. In machining at high speeds, momentum can be important and the strain rate can be exceedingly high. For these reasons, a fluid mechanics approach to understanding high-speed, very high-speed, and ultra-high-speed machining is attempted here. Namely, a potential flow solution is used to model the behavior of the material around a sharp tool tip during machining at high speeds. It is carefully argued that the potential flow solution is relevant and can be used as a first approximation to model the behavior of a metal during high-speed, very high-speed, or ultra-high-speed machining events; and at a minimum, the potential flow solution is qualitatively useful in understanding mechanics of machining at high speeds and above. Interestingly, the flow solution predicts that there is a stagnation point on the rake face, not at the tool tip as is usually assumed. Because the stagnation point is not at the tool tip, the flow solution predicts a significant amount of deformation in the workpiece resulting in large residual strains that may lead to a temperature rise on the finished surface.


2011 ◽  
Vol 188 ◽  
pp. 578-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshiyuki Obikawa ◽  
Masahiro Anzai ◽  
Tsuneo Egawa ◽  
Norihiko Narutaki ◽  
Kazuhiro Shintani ◽  
...  

This paper describes strong nonlinearity in log V-log L relationship, which is often found in machining of supperalloys, titanium alloys, hardened steels, cast irons, etc. The nonlinearity plays an important and favorable role in extension of life-span cutting distance at higher cutting speeds; that is, in a certain range of cutting speed, life-span cutting distance increases with cutting speed. Results of tool wear in a sliding test and cutting experiments, which showed the evidences of strong nonlinearity, were investigated and the mechanisms causing the nonlinearity were discussed.


Author(s):  
Jae-Wook Oh ◽  
Hsin-Yu Kuo ◽  
Kevin Meyer ◽  
Roger Lindle ◽  
Howard Weaver ◽  
...  

At some cutting conditions chips formed during high-speed face turning of nickel based alloys are re-bonded to the machined workpiece surface, even when coolant is applied. Unfortunately, chip-rebonding reduces surface quality, which leads to a shorter fatigue lives for machined parts. Although several researchers have documented this phenomenon and its effects, the root causes of this phenomenon is currently unknown. In order to determine the root causes of chip rebonding, past test samples exhibiting chip rebonding were first analyzed. Metallographic analysis revealed that the chip rebonding material is the same as the workpiece material and that the bonding is mechanically driven. Next, screening design of experiments (DOE) were completed to reliably reproduce chip rebonding in dry cutting cases. Chip rebonding detection and severity were measured using multiple equally spaced surface roughness measurements (Rt parameter). In addition, in-process cutting forces and tool wear measurements were recorded and compared. Finally Taguchi methods were applied to identify the key variables their influence on chip-rebonding. In dry cutting tests it was found that decreasing feed-rate while cutting at a constant cutting speed is the most influential factor in obtaining chip rebonding. High-speed video revealed that at lower feed-rates the chip curls back to the surface of workpiece, while at higher feed-rates the chip flows away from the cutting region with minimal curl. Additional testing performed verifies this theory.


2010 ◽  
Vol 126-128 ◽  
pp. 653-657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guang Ming Zheng ◽  
Jun Zhao ◽  
Xin Yu Song ◽  
Cao Qing Yan ◽  
Yue En Li

This paper explores the wear mechanisms of a Sialon ceramic tool in ultra high speed turning of Nickel-based alloy Inconel 718. Microstructures of the chips are also investigated. Stereo optical microscope and scanning electron microscope (SEM) are employed to observe worn surfaces of the tool produced by various wear mechanisms and morphological features of chips. In addition, the elemental compositions of wear products are evaluated by energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). As a result of the study, wear mechanisms identified in the machining tests involve adhesive wear and abrasive wear. At the initial stage of cutting process, crater wear and flank wear are the main wear patterns. At the rapid wear stage, the SEM and EDS results showed that the adhered elements of Inconel 718 alloy on the tool rake face such as Ni, Fe and Cr accelerated the tool wear rate. Meanwhile, it was found that the chip morphology was serrated type under ultra high speed cutting condition, furthermore, the tendency of serration of the chip increased with the increase in cutting speed and feed rate.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014.49 (0) ◽  
pp. 121-122
Author(s):  
Yasuyoshi SAITO ◽  
Takeshi YAMAGUCHI ◽  
Kei SHIBATA ◽  
Yuki KADOTA ◽  
Takeshi KUBO ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Said Jahanmir ◽  
Michael J. Tomaszewski ◽  
Hooshang Heshmat

Small precision parts with miniaturized features are increasingly used in components such as sensors, micro-medical devices, micro-fuel cells, and others. Mechanical micromachining processes, e.g., turning, drilling, milling and grinding are often used for fabrication of miniaturized components. The small micro-tools (50 μm to 500 μm diameter) used in micromachining limit the surface speeds achieved at the cutting point, unless the rotational speeds are substantially increased. Although the cutting speeds increase to 240 m/min with larger diameter tools (e.g., 500 μm) when using the highest available spindle speed of 150,000 rpm, the cutting speed with the smaller 50 μm tools is limited to 24 m/min. This low cutting speed at the tool tip is much smaller than the speeds required for efficient cutting. For example, in macro-milling of aluminum alloys the recommended speed is on the order of 60–200 m/min. The use of low cutting speeds limits the production rate, increases tool wear and tendency for burr formation, and limits the degree of dimensional tolerance and precision that can be achieved. The purpose of the present paper is to provide preliminary results that show the feasibility of ultra high-speed micro-milling of an aluminum alloy with respect to surface quality and burr formation. A new ultra high-speed spindle was used for micro-milling of an aluminum alloy with micro-end-mills ranging in diameter from 51 μm to 305 μm. Straight channels were machined to obtain an array of square patterns on the surface. High surface cutting speeds up to 340 m/min were achieved at 350,000 rpm. Inspection of the machined surfaces indicated that edge quality and burr formation tendency are related to the undeformed chip thickness, and therefore the cutting speed and feed rate. The quantity of burrs observed on the cut surfaces was generally small, and therefore, the burr types were not systematically determined. Cutting with the 305 μm tool at a cutting speed of 150 m/min produced an excellent cut quality using a chip thickness of 0.13 μm. However, the cut quality deteriorated as the chip thickness was decreased to 0.06 μm by increasing the cutting speed to 340 mm/min. This result is consistent with published data that show the dependence of bur formation on ratio of chip thickness to tool tip radius. The channel widths were also measured and the width of channels cut with the small diameter tools became larger than the tool diameter at higher speeds. The dependence of the channel widths on rotational speed and the fact that a similar variation was not observed for larger diameter tools, suggested that this phenomena is related to dynamic run-out of the tool tip, which increases the channel width at higher speeds.


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