Mechanism of grinding wheel surface reproduction in regular surface texture generation

2008 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 219-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Stepien
Author(s):  
Piotr Stȩpień

Most of the methods for generating regular surface texture (RST) consist of shaping a set of regular grooves (cavities) arranged in a regular way. This paper presents possibilities for regular surface texture generation by so-called “pattern grinding” with the wheel prepared in a special way. The simple variant of the method involves grinding with the wheel having helical grooves. The grooves shaped on the work material are the result of specific wheel surface reproduction. The ratio between work-material feed and wheel speed is an important factor, determining the layout of the grooves generated on the work-material and the shape of the groove sides. Surface texture consists of two components: deterministic, resulting from the nominal wheel active surface, and random, resulting from the random shape and arrangement of abrasive grains. The limited contribution of the random component of surface texture is discussed based on the ratio between the undeformed chip thickness and the sizes of the grooves. Kinematical analysis of the wheel reproduction process is performed for description of nominal surface texture. Experimental results of flat and cylindrical surfaces, obtained with pattern grinding are also provided. Two critical values of the ratio between work-material feed and wheel speed were derived, and three ranges of this ratio are discussed. The kinematical approach provided relationships between input data of the process (wheel shape and grinding parameters) and nominal groove dimensions and groove layout. The geometrical characteristics of the work-material nominal surface texture are presented for each of the three types of surface texture. It is important to ensure that the work feeds are greater than the lower critical value. For achievable work feeds the shape of the sides of the grooves is cycloid. Experiments revealed the limited contribution of the random component of the surface structure of the work material. Random arrangement of abrasive grains is important only at local (micro-) level and affects the roughness of groove bottoms, while the dimensions and arrangement of the grooves are affected only to a minimal degree.


2001 ◽  
Vol 123 (4) ◽  
pp. 582-590 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik J. Salisbury ◽  
K. Vinod Domala ◽  
Kee S. Moon ◽  
Michele H. Miller ◽  
John W. Sutherland

In order to produce ground parts that have desirable surface properties, it is necessary to understand the evolution of these characteristics through the surface generation mechanisms involved in the grinding process. Since the geometry of the wheel surface, in part, determines the final workpiece geometry, the influence of the 3-D structure of a wheel surface on the final workpiece geometry is studied. In this work, a wheel surface model is developed that can be integrated with a surface grinding process model for simulating workpiece surface texture. The simulations utilizing the integrated model are used to study the workpiece surface roughness as a function of the frequency characteristics of the wheel surface. The 2-D Fourier forward and inverse transforms are employed to study and model the 3-D surface structure. In particular, the effect of specific frequency components in the wheel surface on the ground surface are analyzed. It is shown that workpiece surfaces resulting from wheel surfaces with dominant low frequency components have higher roughness, and that the low frequency components indicate a clustering of abrasive grains on the wheel surface.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1017 ◽  
pp. 592-597 ◽  
Author(s):  
Akihiko Kubo ◽  
A.M.M. Sharif Ullah ◽  
Jun’ichi Tamaki

The surface of a grinding wheel dressed by a diamond rotary dresser was generated by computer-aided simulation for the case of multipass dressing on the assumption that the grinding wheel is a homogeneous solid body and the dressing trajectories of the diamond grits are perfectly copied on the grinding wheel surface. The dressing process was visualized as a contour map of the dressed surface profile and the effects of the dressing strategy, i.e., down-cut dressing or up-cut dressing, on the grinding wheel removal process were investigated. It was found that the diamond grits remain the residual depth of cut on the surface of the grinding wheel, resulting in an actual depth of cut larger than that given by the rotary dresser.


CIRP Annals ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 291-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joäo F. Gomes de Oliveira ◽  
David A. Dornfeld

2008 ◽  
Vol 389-390 ◽  
pp. 36-41
Author(s):  
Feng Wei Huo ◽  
Dong Ming Guo ◽  
Ren Ke Kang ◽  
Zhu Ji Jin

A 3D profiler based on scanning white light interferometry with a lateral sampling interval of 0.11μm was introduced to measure the surface topography of a #3000 diamond grinding wheel, and a large sampling area could be achieved by its stitching capability without compromising its lateral or vertical resolution. The protrusion height distribution of diamond grains and the static effective grain density of the grinding wheel were derived, and the wheel chatter and the deformation of the wheel were analyzed as well. The study shows that the grain protrusion height obeys an approximate normal distribution, the static effective grain density is much lower than the theoretical density, and only a small number of diamond grains are effective in the grinding process with fine diamond grinding wheel. There exists waviness on the grinding wheel surface parallel with the wheel cutting direction. The cutting surface of the grinding wheel is not flat but umbilicate, which indicates that the elastic deformation at the wheel edges is much larger than in the center region.


2016 ◽  
Vol 709 ◽  
pp. 77-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji Cai Kuai ◽  
Cheng Ran Jiang ◽  
Jiang Wei Wang

In this paper we analyze the forming mechanism of composite abrasive grains in oxide film on ELID grinding wheel surface, By using composition information and by taking advantage of microscale structure, we have investigated that abrasive grains surface is covered by a layer of oxide film and the fresh oxide film is loose and porous like turtle shaped crack when crushed and dried. The elements of oxide film consist of α-Fe2O3 with sphere grain of 5-50nm. This phenomena is demonstrated that the composite abrasive grains in oxide film is a compound structure which is centered by abrasive grains, with α-Fe2O3,Fe (OH)3 surrounded.


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