Surface Integrity in Electrical Discharge Machining of Ti-6Al-4V

2009 ◽  
Vol 76-78 ◽  
pp. 613-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian Wu Yu ◽  
Peng Xiao ◽  
Yu Shan Liao ◽  
Min Cheng

Titanium alloy is a kind of typical difficult-to-machine materials. In this study, the surface integrity of titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V machined by electrical discharge machining (EDM) method are experimentally investigated and analyzed in term of surface roughness, SEM micrographs and microcracks. Effect of discharge energy and material properties on surface integrity are presented in this paper.

Author(s):  
Ze Yu ◽  
Dunwen Zuo ◽  
Yuli Sun ◽  
Guohua Li ◽  
Xuemei Chen ◽  
...  

To simultaneously optimize the surface quality and machining efficiency of the electrical discharge machining (EDM) processes used to produce titanium alloy quadrilateral group small hole parts, a combined “EDM + AFM” machining technology is proposed in this paper as an efficient and high-quality machining approach. In the proposed method, TC4 titanium alloy is first machined using the EDM process with graphite electrodes and the abrasive flow machining (AFM) process is then used to finish the machined surface. The effects of various electrical parameters on EDM-derived surface quality and improvements in EDM-derived quality under the application of AFM were assessed and, using the final surface roughness as a constraint condition, the effects of various combinations of EDM and “EDM + AFM” on efficiency were studied. The results revealed that the thickness and surface roughness of the superficial recast layer of the TC4 titanium alloy increase with both current and pulse width; in particular, increasing these parameters can increase the surface roughness by two to three grades. Following AFM, the alloy has a more uniform hardness distribution and the surface stress state changes from tensile to compressive stress, indicating that the combined “EDM + AFM” machining scheme can significantly enhance the surface quality of EDM-produced titanium alloy quadrilateral small group holes. The combined scheme achieves a balancing point beyond which increasing the roughness or the number of machining holes enhances either the machining efficiency or the machining surface quality. In the case of typical titanium alloy quadrilateral group small hole parts, the combined machining process can improve the finishing efficiency and total machining efficiency by 71.2% and 25.36%, respectively.


Author(s):  
Murahari Kolli ◽  
Adepu Kumar

Surfactant and graphite powder–assisted electrical discharge machining was proposed and experiments were performed on titanium alloy in this investigation. Analysis was carried out to observe changes in dielectric fluid behaviour, material removal rate, surface roughness, recast layer thickness, surface topography and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. It was found out that the addition of surfactant to dielectric fluid (electrical discharge machining oil + graphite powder) improved the material removal rate and surface roughness. It was noticed to have reduced the recast layer thickness and agglomeration of graphite and sediment particles. Biface material migrations between the electrode and the workpiece surface were identified, and migration behaviour was powerfully inhibited by the mixing of surfactant. Surfactant added into dielectric fluid played an important role in the discharge gap, which increased the conductivity, and suspended debris particles in dielectric fluid reduced the abnormal discharge conditions of the machine and improved the overall machining efficiency.


Author(s):  
Guisen Wang ◽  
Fuzhu Han ◽  
Liang Zhu

Abstract White layer and residual stress are the main reasons for the decrease in fatigue life of electrical discharge machined samples. Therefore, it is important to research the evolution of the white layer and residual stress in electrical discharge machining and explain the influence mechanism of machining parameters on them. In this study, the surface topography, white layer thickness, and residual stress of electrical discharge machined samples under different processing parameters were evaluated. The results indicated that surface roughness, white layer thickness, and residual stress increased as the discharge current (I) and pulse-on time (ton) increased. However, when the ton was short, the effect of I (≤ 9.8 A) on surface roughness is not very obvious. When the discharge energy is similar, surface roughness is high under high I conditions. When the discharge energy is similar and low, the average thickness of the white layer is thin under the low I. The effect of I on surface residual stress was greater than that of the ton. The I and ton affect the white layer and residual stress by affecting the amount of melting and removal of the materials. These results were demonstrated that the input process of discharge energy has an important influence on residual stress and the white layer. Therefore, under the premise of ensuring the processing requirements, they can be controlled by selecting the appropriate combination of the ton and I to improve the fatigue life of the workpiece.


Author(s):  
Gangadharudu Talla ◽  
Soumya Gangopadhyay ◽  
CK Biswas

In recent times, nickel-based super alloys are widely utilized in aviation, processing, and marine industries owing to their supreme ability to retain the mechanical properties at elevated temperature in combination with remarkable resistance to corrosion. Some of the properties of these alloys such as low thermal conductivity, strain hardening tendency, chemical affinity, and presence of hard and abrasives phases in the microstructure render these materials very difficult-to-cut using conventional machining processes. In this work, an experimental setup was developed and integrated with the existing electrical discharge machining system for carrying out powder-mixed electrical discharge machining process for Inconel 625. The experiments were planned and conducted by varying five different variables, that is, powder concentration, peak current, pulse-on time, duty cycle, and gap voltage based on the central composite design of response surface methodology. Effects of these parameters along with powder concentration were investigated on various surface integrity aspects including surface morphology, surface roughness, surface microhardness, change in the composition of the machined surface, and residual stress. Results clearly indicated that addition of powder to dielectric has significantly improved surface integrity compared to pure dielectric. Among the powders used, silicon has resulted in highest microhardness, that is, almost 14% more than graphite. Lowest surface roughness (approximately 50% less than pure kerosene) and least residual stress were obtained using silicon powder (approximately 8% less than graphite-mixed dielectric). Relative content of nickel was reduced at the expense of Nb and Mo after addition of powders like aluminum and graphite in dielectric during electrical discharge machining.


2013 ◽  
Vol 683 ◽  
pp. 581-584 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shu Guo Zhao ◽  
Rui Li ◽  
Xiao Min Yao

Due to the excellent characteristics of titanium alloy, was applied to aviation, marine, automotive, metallurgy, medical equipment and other fields. However, some of the characteristics make it machine difficultly, so the range of applications would be limited. In this paper, titanium alloy is cut by wire electrical discharge machining (WEDM) and study the surface finish. The model of surface roughness is established which is based on theoretical analysis. Experimental results were analyzed and optimized by the theory of signal-to-noise ratio and grey relational analysis (GRA) method. The minimal surface roughness is achieved by the optimal results .According to GRA, get the order that is the influence of electric parameters on the surface roughness.


Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 530 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakesh Chaudhari ◽  
Jay J. Vora ◽  
Vivek Patel ◽  
L. N. López de Lacalle ◽  
D. M. Parikh

Shape-memory alloys such as nitinol are gaining popularity as advanced materials in the aerospace, medical, and automobile sectors. However, nitinol is a difficult-to-cut material because of its versatile specific properties such as the shape-memory effect, superelasticity, high specific strength, high wear and corrosion resistance, and severe strain hardening. Anunconventional machining process like wire-electrical-discharge-machining (WEDM) can be effectively and efficiently used for the machining of such alloys, although the WEDM-induced surface integrity of nitinol hassignificant impact on material performance. Therefore, this work investigated the surface integrity of WEDM-processed nitinol samples using digital microscopy imaging, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) analysis. Three-dimensional analysis of the surfaces was carried out in two different patterns (along the periphery and the vertical plane of the machined surface) andrevealed that surface roughness was maximalat the point where the surface was largely exposed to the WEDM dielectric fluid. To attain the desired surface roughness, appropriate discharge energy is required that, in turn, requires the appropriate parameter settings of the WEDM process. Different SEM image analyses showed a reduction in microcracks and pores, and in globule-density size at optimized parameters. EDX analysis revealed the absence of wire material on the machined surface


Nanomaterials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafał Świercz ◽  
Dorota Oniszczuk-Świercz

Electrical discharge machining (EDM) is a nonconventional technology that is frequently used in manufacturing for difficult-to-cut conductive materials. Drawbacks to using EDM include the resulting surface roughness and integrity. One of the recent innovations for improving surface integrity with EDM is the use of a powder mixed dielectric. The aim of this study is to analyze the influence of having reduced graphene oxide (RGO) in the dielectric on the ionization of the plasma channel and the dispersion of electrical discharges. The main goal is to improve the surface integrity of the tool steel 55NiCrMoV7 during finishing machining. To achieve this goal, an experimental investigation was carried out to establish the smallest possible values of discharge current and pulse time at which it is possible to initiate an electric discharge, which causes material removal. Next, the effect of the direction of the electric discharges (electrode polarity) and the concentration (percentage) of RGO in the dielectric on surface integrity was investigated. The results of this experiment indicate that during EDM with RGO, the discharges are dispersed on the RGO flakes. This leads to a multiplication of the discharges during a single pulse, and this strongly affects the surface integrity. The obtained results indicate that it is possible to reduce surface roughness and thickness of the recast layer by approximately 2.5 times compared with conventional EDM.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-38
Author(s):  
Jun Qi Tan ◽  
Mohd Yazid Abu

The experimental carried out to aim at the selection of the best condition machining parameter combination for wire electrical discharge machining (WEDM) of titanium alloy (Ti–6Al–4V). By using Design Expert 10 software, a series of experiments were performed by selecting pulse-on time, pulse-off time, servo voltage and peak current as parameters. The responses that considered were cutting speed, material removal rate, sparking gap and surface roughness. Based on ANOVA analysis, the effect from the parameters on the responses was determined. The optimum machining parameters setting for the maximum cutting speed, minimum sparking gap and minimum surface roughness were found by proceed optimization experiment. Then, each optimization response had their own combination setting on WEDM to cut titanium alloy. 3D response surface graph such as dome and bowl shape represent maximum and minimum point for the solutions had shown in the report. Finally, predicted and actual value from the experiment have been calculated for validation.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document