Analysis of Forces and Temperatures in Conventional and Ultrasonically-Assisted Cutting of Bone

2011 ◽  
Vol 223 ◽  
pp. 247-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khurshid Alam ◽  
Abdul Ghafoor ◽  
Vadim V. Silberschmidt

Bone cutting is a frequently used procedure in orthopaedic and neuro surgeries. Current research on bone cutting is concerned with the efforts to decrease the forces generated during cutting the bone as well as temperature to avoid mechanical and thermal damage (bone necrosis) induced by surgical tools. The paper presents results of finite-element simulations of conventional cutting (CC) and ultrasonically-assisted cutting (UAC) of bone in order to understand thermomechanics of the process. The study was aimed at investigating the levels of tool-penetration force and temperatures induced in the bone when a hard cutting tool penetrates into it in both types of cutting. The models allow the quantitative analysis of forces and temperatures produced during the cutting process. The use of UAC reduces the tool penetration force and temperature in the cutting region

2012 ◽  
Vol 499 ◽  
pp. 39-44
Author(s):  
L. Yan ◽  
Feng Jiang ◽  
Y.M. Rong

This paper presented a finite element simulation model for the analysis of AISI D2 orthogonal cutting process using TiAlN coated inserts. Firstly, AISI D2 material constitutive model was built based on power law model, which was used in the FEM codes to describe the effect of strain, strain rate and temperature on the material flow stress. In modeling the chip formation, a damage model was employed to predict the chip separation. Then cutting edge radius and thickness of TiAlN coating of cutting tool were measured by SEM. Friction coefficients of cutting tool against AISI D2 steel were obtained by ball-on-plate friction tests on UMT-2 high speed tribometer. Finally, finite element simulations of AISI D2 orthogonal cutting processes were performed using AdvantedgeTM software. The simulated results of cutting forces and chip morphology showed good agreement with the experimental results, which validated the reliability of the cutting process simulation method.


Mechanika ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (4) ◽  
pp. 326-334
Author(s):  
Kamuran Kamil YEŞİLKAYA ◽  
Kemal YAMAN

It is widely accepted that heat partition and temperature distribution for metal cutting process have a significant effect on the morphological features of the cutting tool. Tool life and cutting accuracy are considerably affected by temperature distribution and heat transfer mechanisms on the tool. When a finite elements model is accurately generated, an understanding of heat partition into the cutting tool without performing experiments can be gained. This study has been completed with the use of uncoated and coated tools in order to predetermine heat partition value entering the cutting tool. In terms of coated tools, tool coating was investigated to assess its effects on heat partition. Finite Element Method was mainly used in combination with the previously generated experimental data in literature. Three-dimensional uncoated and coated models were created and made compatible with finite element modeling software to be able to perform thermal analyses of the cutting process. Finite element transient and steady-state temperature values were calculated and hence the heat intensity value for the cutting tool was determined.


Author(s):  
Keith A. Bourne ◽  
Shiv G. Kapoor ◽  
Richard E. DeVor

In an earlier paper, a high-speed microgroove cutting process that makes use of a flexible single-point cutting tool was presented. In this paper, 3D finite element modeling of this cutting process is used to better understand process mechanics. The development of the model, including parameter estimation and validation, is described. Validation experiments show that on average the model predicts side burr height to within 2.8%, chip curl radius to within 4.1%, and chip thickness to within 25.4%. The model is used to examine chip formation, side burr formation, and exit burr formation. Side burr formation is shown to primarily occur ahead of a tool and is caused by expansion of material compressed after starting to flow around a tool rather than becoming part of a chip. Exit burr formation is shown to occur when a thin membrane of material forms ahead of a tool and splits into two side segments and one bottom segment as the tool exits a workpiece.


2010 ◽  
Vol 455 ◽  
pp. 360-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jing Lin Tong ◽  
Yan Yan Yan ◽  
Bo Zhao

Ultrasonic-vibration hard cutting (UVHC) is a advanced technology, where high- frequency vibration is superimposed on the movement of the cutting tool. Compared to conventional turning (CT), this technique allows significant improvements in processing hard-to-cut materials, by producing a noticeable decrease in cutting forces and a superior surface finish. The paper presents a finite-element model of both CT and UVHC. Stresses produced in workpiece and cutting forces acting on the cutting tool in UVHC are studied, and the influence of cutting parameters, such as cutting speed and cutting depth on cutting force are investigated.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 5404
Author(s):  
Jarosław Kaczmarczyk

This paper modelled the cutting process of a bundle consisted of ultra-thin cold-rolled steel sheets using a guillotine. The geometry of a cutting tool with given dimensions was assumed. A bundle of sheets being cut was modelled as deformable, the cutting tool was rigid, and the finite element method along with computer system LS-DYNA was employed. Numerical simulations of the complex state of stress and of the corresponding complex state of strain were carried out. Cutting processes belong to fast changing physical phenomena, and therefore, highly nonlinear dynamical algorithms were applied in order to solve this particular problem. Experimental investigations were also conducted by means of the scanning electron microscopy. It was found that the fracture region consisted of two distinct zones: brittle and ductile separated from each other by the interfacial transition. Morphological features of the brittle, ductile, and the transition regions were identified. The ductile and brittle zones were separated at the depth of ca. 1/5 thickness of the cut steel sheet. Finally, the numerical results obtained by usage of the finite element method as well as experimental ones in the form of microscopic images were compared, showing quite good agreement.


2012 ◽  
Vol 268-270 ◽  
pp. 496-499 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Fan ◽  
Xin Liu

The cutting principle of high speed machining is analyzed, and the key technology of building high speed cutting finite element simulation model is systemic explained. By simplifying high speed cutting process, using the fastest solution of nonlinear finite element software ADINA which is development in recent years to establish the three dimensional finite element model of high speed metal cutting, and to predict the cutting force of different cutting tool geometry parameter combination of high speed cutting process, the high speed cutting processing cutting tool analysis and processing parameter optimization analysis method are put forwarded, so as to provide a new tool for the research of high speed machining process and provide basis for the cutting tool choice during high-speed nc cutting process.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Komvopoulos ◽  
S. A. Erpenbeck

The finite element method was used to model chip formation in orthogonal metal cutting. Emphasis was given on analyzing the effect of important factors, such as plastic flow of the workpiece material, friction at the tool-workpiece interface, and wear of the tool, on the cutting process. To simulate separation of the chip from the workpiece, superposition of two nodes at each nodal location of a parting line of the initial mesh was imposed. According to the developed algorithm, the superimposed nodes were constrained to assume identical displacements, until approaching to a specified small distance from the tool tip. At that juncture, the displacement constraint was removed and separation of the nodes was allowed. Under the usual plane strain assumption, quasi-static finite element simulations of orthogonal metal cutting were performed for interfacial friction coefficients equal to zero, 0.15, and 0.5 and unworn or worn (cratered) tools having a strongly adherent built-up edge. To investigate the significance of the deformation of the workpiece material on the cutting process, elastic-perfectly plastic and elastic-plastic with isotropic strain hardening and strain rate sensitivity constitutive laws were used in the analysis. For simplicity, the tool material and the built-up edge were modeled as perfectly rigid. In all cases analyzed, the cutting speed and depth of cut were set equal to 183 m/min and 1.27 mm, respectively. Experiments confirmed that cutting of AISI 4340 steel with ceramic-coated tools under similar conditions led to the development of a built-up edge and the formation of continuous chips. The dimensions of the crater, assumed in the finite element simulations involving a cratered tool, were also determined from the same cutting experiments. Spatial distributions of the equivalent total plastic strain and the von Mises equivalent stress corresponding to steady-state cutting conditions and the normal and shear stresses at the rake face are contrasted and interpreted qualitatively in terms of critical parameters. The influence of interfacial friction, metal flow characteristics, and wear at the rake face of the tool on the steady-state magnitudes of the cutting forces, shear plane angle, chip thickness, and chip-tool contact length are also elucidated. Several aspects of the metal cutting process predicted by the finite element model agreed well with experimental results and phenomenological observations.


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