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1.
Milling of hardened steel generates excessive heat during the chip formation process, which increases the temperature of cutting tool and accelerates tool wear. Application of conventional cutting fluid in milling process may not effectively control the heat generation also it has inherent health and environmental problems. To minimize health hazard and environmental problems caused by using conventional cutting fluid, a cryogenic cooling set up is developed to cool tool–chip interface using liquid nitrogen (LN2). This paper presents results on the effect of LN2 as a coolant on machinability of hardened AISI H13 tool steel for varying cutting speed in the range of 75–125 m/min during end milling with PVD TiAlN coated carbide inserts at a constant feed rate. The results show that machining with LN2 lowers cutting temperature, tool flank wear, surface roughness and cutting forces as compared with dry and wet machining. With LN2 cooling, it has been found that the cutting temperature was reduced by 57–60% and 37–42%; the tool flank wear was reduced by 29–34% and 10–12%; the surface roughness was decreased by 33–40% and 25–29% compared to dry and wet machining. The cutting forces also decreased moderately compared to dry and wet machining. This can be attributed to the fact that LN2 machining provides better cooling and lubrication through substantial reduction in the cutting zone temperature.  相似文献   

2.
Machining of 17-4 Precipitation Hardenable Stainless Steel (PH SS) is one of the difficult tasks because of its high cutting temperatures. Conventional cutting fluids are used to overcome the high cutting temperatures, but these are not acceptable from the health and environmental sustainable points of view. Cryogenic cooling is one of the potential techniques to overcome such problems. In the current work, comparison is made of cryogenic turning results, such as tool flank wear, cutting forces (feed force, main cutting force), cutting temperature, chip morphology and surface integrity characteristics with wet machining during machining of heat-treated 17-4 PH SS. The result showed that in cryogenic machining, a maximum of 53%, 78%, 35% and 16% reductions was observed in tool flank wear, cutting temperature, surface roughness and cutting force, respectively, when compared with wet machining. It was also evident from the experimental results that cryogenic machining significantly improved the machining performance and product quality even at high feed rates.  相似文献   

3.
Under higher cutting conditions, machining of 17-4 precipitation hardenable stainless steel (PH SS) is a difficult task due to the high cutting temperatures as well as accumulation of chips at the machining zone, which causes tool damage and impairment of machined surface finish. Cryogenic machining is an efficient, eco-friendly manufacturing process. In the current work, cutting temperature, tool wear (flank wear (Vb) and rake wear), chip morphology, and surface integrity (surface topography, surface finish (Ra), white layer thickness (WLT)) were considered as investigative machinability characteristics under the cryogenic (liquid nitrogen), minimum quantity lubrication (MQL), wet and dry environments at varying cutting velocities while machining 17-4 PH SS. The results show that the maximum cutting temperature drop found in cryogenic machining was 72%, 62%, and 61%, respectively, in contrast to dry, wet, and MQL machining conditions. Similarly, the maximum tool wear reduction was found to be 60%, 55%, and 50% in cryogenic machining over the dry, wet, and MQL machining conditions, respectively. Among all the machining environments, better surface integrity was obtained by cryogenic machining, which could produce the functionally superior products.  相似文献   

4.
In order to eradicate the use of mineral based cutting fluid, the machining of Ni–Cr–Co based Nimonic 90 alloy was conducted using environment friendly sustainable techniques. In this work, uncoated tungsten carbide inserts were employed for the machining under dry (untreated and cryogenically treated), MQL, and cryogenic cutting modes. The influence of all these techniques was examined by considering tool wear, surface finish, chip contact length, chip thickness, and chip morphology. It was found that the cryogenically treated tools outperformed the untreated tools at 40 m/min. At cutting speed of 80 m/min, MQL and direct cooling with liquid nitrogen brought down the flank wear by 50% in comparison to dry machining. Similarly at higher cutting speed, MQL and cryogenic cooling techniques provided the significant improvement in terms of nose wear, crater wear area, and chip thickness value. However, both dry and MQL modes outperformed the cryogenic cooling machining in terms of surface roughness value at all the cutting speeds. Overall cryotreated tools was able to provide satisfactory results at lower speed (40 m/min). Whereas both MQL and cryogenic cooling methods provided the significantly improved results at higher cutting speeds (60 and 80 m/min) over dry machining.  相似文献   

5.
The present research work has been undertaken with a view to investigate the influence of CVD multilayer coated (TiN/TiCN/Al2O3/ZrCN) and cutting speed on various machining characteristics such as chip morphology, tool wear, cutting temperature, and machined surface roughness during dry turning of 17-4 PH stainless steel. In order to understand the effectiveness of CVD multilayer coated tool a comparison has been carried out with that of uncoated carbide insert. The surface roughness and cutting temperature obtained during machining with chemical vapor deposition (CVD) multilayer coated tool was higher than that of uncoated carbide insert at all cutting velocity. However, the results clearly indicated that CVD multilayer coated tool played a significant role in restricting various modes of tool failure and reducing chip deformation compared to its uncoated counterpart. Adhesion and abrasion were found to be dominating wear mechanism with flank wear, plastic deformation, and catastrophic failure being major tool wear modes.  相似文献   

6.
Tool wear in cryogenic turning of Ti-6Al-4V alloy   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Though titanium alloys are being increasingly sought in a wide variety of engineering and biomedical applications, their manufacturability, especially machining and grinding imposes lot of constraints. Rapid tool wear encountered in machining of titanium alloys is a challenge that needs to be overcome. Cryogenic machining with liquid nitrogen as coolant is being investigated by researchers to reduce the cutting zone temperatures and enhance the tool life. The effects of cryogenic cooling have been studied on growth and nature tool wear in the present investigation while turning Ti-6Al-4V alloy bars with microcrystalline uncoated carbide inserts under dry, wet and cryogenic cooling environments in the cutting velocity range of 70-100 m/min. Cryogenic cooling by liquid nitrogen jets enabled substantial improvement in tool life through reduction in adhesion-dissolution-diffusion tool wear through control of machining temperature desirably at the cutting zone.  相似文献   

7.
Heat buildup is an important issue on the cutting edge which then promotes high-temperature wear which consequently leads to poor machinability during dry machining. To improve the machinability, new tool holder designs accommodating cooling techniques have paid considerable attention toward the manufacturing domain recently. Whereas, in this paper, a new tool holder is designed and fabricated to serve for multipurpose cooling arrangements (internal cooling, external cooling) to reduce the heat buildup of the cutting edge along with the consolidated air system to clear away the chips. Initially, need of new tool holder is discussed followed by its manufacturability and machinability characteristics to a machine for nickel alloy Inconel 725. Machinability studies then are compared for dry machining, internal and external wet machining, and tool wear results are discussed. Thus, improvement in tool wear of around 70–75% and 65–72% is observed for internal wet, external wet concerning dry machining, respectively. Whereas, 15–18% (flank wear) and 6–9% (nose wear) improvement are seen for internal wet machining when compared with external wet machining. Results are best understood for internal cooling using a new tool holder.  相似文献   

8.
Two advanced machining methods such as thermally enhanced machining and ultrasonic-assisted machining are recently considered in many studies. In this article, a new hybrid milling process is presented by gathering the characteristics of these two methods. In order to determine the axial depth of cut and engagement in the process, three-dimensional thermal finite-element analysis is applied to determine the dimensions of softened materials. Finite-element modal analysis is used to determine the dimensions and clamping state of the workpiece while cutting area has the highest vibration amplitude. Full factorial experimental design is applied to investigate the effect of hybrid machining parameters on the surface roughness and tool wear. Tool flank wear was investigated under the condition of constant cutting speed during different period of times. Hybrid milling process with an amplitude of 6 µm and a temperature of 900°C creates a surface with 42% lower roughness in comparison to conventional milling in feed 0.08 mm/tooth. In a study of tool flank wear, the results show that application of TEUAM decreases flank wear at least 16% in comparison to all other processes.  相似文献   

9.
Reducing the contact area between the cutting tool rake surface and chip promotes the machining performance of the work material and increases the tool life. Magnesium alloys are ductile-lightweight materials that form continuous chips during machining. The present investigation discusses the orthogonal turning of ZK60 magnesium alloy with linearly textured cutting inserts under both dry and liquid nitrogen (LN2) cooling conditions. Linear grooves that are parallel and perpendicular to chip flow direction were created using Nd-YAG laser on the tungsten carbide cutting inserts. The effect of texturing combined with the application of LN2 cooling is studied by evaluating the machining temperature and forces, microhardness, surface roughness and tool wear. Textured tools considerably minimize the liaison area of the chip with the rake plane compared to non-textured tools, which resulted in favorable effects in machinability. In case of cryogenic machining, textured tools substantially minimize the friction by the coupled effect of micro-pool lubrication and the formation of thin-film lubrication between the tool–chip/tool–work interfaces. Parallel-textured tools aided with cryogenic cooling exhibit superior performance during machining among the different types of tools employed in the present investigation.  相似文献   

10.
In machining operations, cutting fluids have been comprehensively used to improve the cutting tool life, but the issues related to manufacturing cost, environment and health call for reducing their use by possible methods. Minimum quantity lubrication (MQL) is a technique that overcomes these problems by spraying a small amount of cutting fluid (<100?ml/hr) as mist using compressed air. In this work, the basic MQL technique is used to achieve flow rates slightly higher (~880?ml/hr) than MQL using simple techniques like paint sprayer and compressor, which is more generally called reduced quantity lubrication (RQL). Another method to increase the tool life is by cryogenic treatment, which increases the hardness of the tool. Tungsten carbide drill bits were subjected to cryogenic treatment (?185 °C). Drilling studies were carried out on AISI 304 stainless steel (SS) using untreated and cryo-treated WC drill bits under RQL and conventional wet lubrication conditions. The tool wear on the treated WC drill bits with RQL was comparatively less than on the untreated ones with RQL and wet lubrication. These improvements were established through microhardness, SEM images, XRD, wear studies and surface roughness measurements comparisons.  相似文献   

11.
In the current study, attempt has been made to investigate the influence of cutting speed (Vc) (51, 84, and 124 m/min) on various machining characteristics like chip morphology, chip thickness ratio, tool wear, surface, and sub-surface integrity during dry turning of Inconel 825. Comparable study was carried out using uncoated and commercially available chemical vapor deposition multilayer coated (TiN/TiCN/Al2O3/ZrCN) cemented carbide (ISO P30 grade) insert. Chip morphology consists of chip forms obtained at different cutting conditions. Serrated chips were observed when machining Inconel 825 with both types of tool with more serration in case of uncoated insert. The chip thickness ratio increased as cutting speed was increased. Use of multilayer coated tool also resulted in increase in chip thickness ratio. Rake and flank surfaces were examined with scanning electron microscope and optical microscope. Abrasion, adhesion, and diffusion wears were found to be dominating tool wear mechanism during dry machining of Inconel 825. The beneficial effect of coated tool over its uncoated counterpart was most prominent during machining at high cutting speed (Vc = 124 m/min). The surface and sub-surface integrity obtained with coated tool were superior to that while machining Inconel 825 with uncoated tool.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

In the present investigation, machinability issues of zinc–aluminium (ZA43) alloy reinforced with silicon carbide particles (SiC) were evaluated. The fabrication of composite was done through liquid metallurgy technique. Metal matrix composite (MMC) was subjected to turning using conventional lathe with three grades of cutting tools, namely, uncoated carbide tool, coated carbide tool and ceramic tool. Surface roughness and tool wear were measured during the machining process. Results reveal that roughness increases with increase in the reinforcement concentration and particle size. Feed has direct influence on roughness, i.e. surface deteriorates with higher feeds. Depth of cut has very minimum effect on the surface roughness, while inverse effect of cutting speed on the roughness was observed (i.e. increase in the cutting speed leads to better finish on the specimen). Tool wear was studied during the investigation, and it was noticed that MMC with higher reinforcement concentration and particle size cause severe wear on the flank of the cutting tool. Increase in the cutting speed, feed and depth of cut also increases the flank wear on the tool. Out of all the three grades of tools, coated carbide tool outperformed uncoated carbide and ceramic tools.  相似文献   

13.
This paper deals with the study of the nanotexturing process of the cutting tool inserts with the influence of a magnetorheological fluid-based texturing method. The rake and flank surface of the cutting tool inserts were finished with a silicon carbide abrasive mixture of a magnetorheological fluid. Experimentation is conducted with input variables such as voltage, gap width, and polishing time to achieve the desired value of % reduction of surface roughness, polishing rate, andpolishing time. The surface roughness is found to be less than 40?nm for textured and 120?nm for non-textured inserts with a lesser polishing time. A higher polishing rate of the cutting tool inserts is achieved at a working voltage of 36?V and a gap width of 0.75?mm. The machinability characteristics of the nanotextured inserts are based on the cutting force; tool wear is studied for the turning operation of Duplex stainless steel. The tool flank wear is observed to be 0.63?mm, after 13th pass when turned with an unpolished insert and 0.612?mm after the 19th pass with a polished insert. From the results, it is found that the nanotextured inserts could achieve a tool life of 60% higher than the un-textured inserts in machining the duplex stainless steel.  相似文献   

14.
Short tool life and rapid tool wear in micromachining of hard-to-machine materials remain a barrier to the process being economically viable. In this study, standard procedures and conditions set by the ISO for tool life testing in milling were used to analyze the wear of tungsten carbide micro-end-milling tools through slot milling conducted on titanium alloy Ti-6 Al-4 V. Tool wear was characterized by flank wear rate,cutting-edge radius change, and tool volumetric change. The effect of machining parameters, such as cutting speed and feedrate, on tool wear was investigated with reference to surface roughness and geometric accuracy of the finished workpiece. Experimental data indicate different modes of tool wear throughout machining, where nonuniform flank wear and abrasive wear are the dominant wear modes. High cutting speed and low feedrate can reduce the tool wear rate and improve the tool life during micromachining.However, the low feedrate enhances the plowing effect on the cutting zone, resulting in reduced surface quality and leading to burr formation and premature tool failure. This study concludes with a proposal of tool rejection criteria for micro-milling of Ti-6 Al-4 V.  相似文献   

15.
Coolant supplied by high pressure into the cutting zone has shown the lower thermal loads on the tool when machining difficult-to-cut materials as the Alloy 718. In this study, we investigate how the combination of high-pressure cooling and tool–surface modifications can lead to further improvements regarding tool life. The general approach is to enhance the coolant–tool interaction by increasing the contact area. Therefore, we machined cooling features into flank and rake faces of commercially available cemented tungsten carbide inserts. In this way, the surface area was increased by ~ 12%. After the cutting tests, the tools were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy. Compared with conventional tools, the tool modifications reduced the flank wear by 45% for the investigated cutting parameters. Furthermore, we were able to significantly increase the cutting speed and feed rate without failure of the tool. The investigated surface modifications have great potential to enhance the productivity of metal cutting processes.  相似文献   

16.
In this article, response surface methodology has been used for finding the optimal machining parameters values for cutting force, surface roughness, and tool wear while milling aluminum hybrid composites. In order to perform the experiment, various machining parameters such as feed, cutting speed, depth of cut, and weight (wt) fraction of alumina (Al2O3) were planned based on face-centered, central composite design. Stir casting method is used to fabricate the composites with various wt fractions (5%, 10%, and 15%) of Al2O3. The multiple regression analysis is used to develop mathematical models, and the models are tested using analysis of variance (ANOVA). Evaluation on the effects and interactions of the machining parameters on the cutting force, surface roughness, and tool wear was carried out using ANOVA. The developed models were used for multiple-response optimization by desirability function approach to determine the optimum machining parameters. The optimum machining parameters obtained from the experimental results showed that lower cutting force, surface roughness, and tool wear can be obtained by employing the combination of higher cutting speed, low feed, lower depth of cut, and higher wt fraction of alumina when face milling hybrid composites using polycrystalline diamond insert.  相似文献   

17.
Drilling holes in carbon fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) laminates are more prone to incur damage during machining. Surface damage could be considerably minimized through the adoption of cryogenic assisted machining. The economic and safety implications associated with cryogenic technology necessitate the exploration of alternate technologies. In this research work, the effects of cutting velocity (100, 125, and 150?m/min) and feed rate (0.03, 0.06, and 0.09?mm/rev) on thrust force, surface roughness, delamination, and acoustic emissions are studied during the drilling of CFRP laminates under chilled air environment and compared with dry drilling. The output parameters are found to be much influenced by feed rate than cutting velocity. Under high feed rate and cutting velocity, the delamination factor, surface roughness, and acoustic emissions are, respectively, reduced by 13.2, 10.5, and 7.4% for the drilling performed under chilled air environment over dry condition. About 9.9% increased thrust force is observed for chilled air-assisted drilling under the identical machining condition.  相似文献   

18.
This article presents machinability of 17-4PH stainless steel using a hybrid technique composed of plasma-enhanced turning and cryogenic turning. First of all, using some primary experimental tests and nonlinear regression, a mathematical model was developed for surface temperature of uncut chip as a function of plasma current and cutting parameters. Then, the influence of cutting speed (Vc), feed (f), and surface temperature of uncut chip (Tsm) was studied on surface roughness (Ra), cutting force (Fz), and tool flank wear (VB). The results show that hybrid turning (HYT) is able to lower the main cutting force and tool flank wear in comparison with conventional turning. In addition, surface roughness was improved except for high level of surface temperature of uncut chip. However, hardness measurement of machined workpiece showed that HYT does not change the hardness of machined surface.  相似文献   

19.
Titanium alloys are utilized in many engineering fields such as chemical, industrial, marine, and aerospace due to their unique properties. Machining of these materials causes severe problems. At high temperatures, they become chemically active and tend to react with tool materials. In the present study, fuzzy logic (a tool in artificial intelligence) is used for the prediction of cutting parameters in turning titanium alloy (Ti-6Al-4V). The parameters considered in this study are cutting speed, feed, and the depth of cut. Fuzzy rule-based modeling is employed for prediction of tool flank wear, surface roughness, and specific cutting pressure in machining of titanium alloy. These models can be effectively used to predict the tool flank wear, surface roughness, and specific cutting pressure in machining of titanium alloys. Analysis of the influences of the individual important machining parameters on the responses have been carried out and presented in this study.  相似文献   

20.
This research article is based mainly on the investigation of the effect of cryogenic machining, while reaming Titanium grade 5 alloy (Ti-6Al-4V) material. Cutting speed (Vc) and feed rate (f) are two input parameters at three different levels for a constant depth of the hole. The output parameters considered by using a cryogenic LN2 cooling compared to a conventional flood cooling are torque (Mt), thrust force (Ft), cutting temperature (T), quality of the hole (circularity and cylindricity), surface roughness (Ra) and chip morphology. The results show cryogenic liquid nitrogen (LN2) cooling resulting in 15–31% reduction in the cutting temperature, 23–57% reduction in the thrust force and 14–65% reduction in torque. Higher surface roughness, circularity (Cir) and cylindricity (Cyl) were observed in the cryogenic LN2 cooling condition. Furthermore, better chip breakability was observed in the cryogenic LN2 cooling condition. No drastic change in the microstructure was observed in both flood and cryogenic LN2 cooling. Increase in microhardness by 10–16% and 8–19% in cryogenic LN2 cooling over flood cooling was observed.  相似文献   

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