scholarly journals Assessment of CVD- and PVD-Coated Carbides and PVD-Coated Cermet Inserts in the Optimization of Surface Roughness in Turning of AISI 1045 Steel

Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (22) ◽  
pp. 5231
Author(s):  
Evandro Paese ◽  
Martin Geier ◽  
Fabiano R. Rodrigues ◽  
Tadeusz Mikolajczyk ◽  
Mozammel Mia

In this study, an experimental and statistic investigation approach based on analysis of variance (ANOVA) and response surface methodology (RSM) techniques was performed to find the significant main effects and two-factor interaction effects and to determine how the controllable factors such as cutting speed, feed rate, depth of cut (DOC), tool nose radius, substrate and coating method of cutting tools influence surface quality in turning of AISI 1045 steel. The first optimal or near-optimal conditions for the quality of the generated surface and the second ones, including maximum material removal rate, were established using the proposed regression equations. The group mean roughness of the turned workpieces was lower from using chemical vapor deposition (CVD)-coated carbide inserts than the group means of other types of inserts; however they could not achieve the specific lowest roughness. The physical vapor deposition (PVD)-coated carbide and cermet inserts achieved the best surface quality when the specific combinations within the range interval of controllable factors were used in the experiment, showing that they may be applied to finish turning processes or even to particular high material removal rate conditions associated with the lowest roughness.

2020 ◽  
Vol 107 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 3511-3525 ◽  
Author(s):  
Danil Yu. Pimenov ◽  
Adel Taha Abbas ◽  
Munish Kumar Gupta ◽  
Ivan N. Erdakov ◽  
Mahmoud Sayed Soliman ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 100-104
Author(s):  
Taranveer Singh ◽  
Khushdeep Goyal ◽  
Parlad Kumar

In this experimental work, the effect of various input parameters viz. work speed, wheel speed,abrasive material, depth of cut, concentration of cutting fluid and number of passes has been studied on thematerial removal rate of cylindrical grinded AISI. For experimentation, three levels of each variable have beenselected except wheel speed. Two levels of wheel speed have been taken. Heat treated AISI 1045 has beenconsidered as work piece material. The result reveals that number of passes followed by the type of abrasivematerial is the most significant to influence material removal rate. The optimum set of input parameters formaximizing the material removal rate has also been found.


2011 ◽  
Vol 223 ◽  
pp. 286-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cédric Courbon ◽  
Tarek Mabrouki ◽  
Joël Rech ◽  
Denis Mazuyer ◽  
Enrico D'Eramo

The present work proposes to enhance the thermal interface denition in Finite Element (FE) simulations of machining. A user subroutine has been developed in Abaqus/Explicit © to implement a new experimentally-based heat partition model extracted from tribological tests. A 2D Arbitrary-Lagragian-Eulerian (ALE) approach is employed to simulate dry orthogonal cutting of AISI 1045 steel with coated carbide inserts. Simulation results are compared to experimental ones over a whole range of cutting speeds and feed rates in terms of average cutting forces, chip thickness, tool chip contact length and heat flux. This study emphasizes that heat transfer and temperature distribution in the cutting tool are drastically in uenced by the thermal formulation used at the interface. Consistency of the numerical results such as heat flux transmitted to the tool, peak temperature as well as hot spot location can be denitively improved.


2011 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamdi Ben Abdelali ◽  
Cedric Courbon ◽  
Joël Rech ◽  
Wacef Ben Salem ◽  
Abdelwaheb Dogui ◽  
...  

The characterization of frictional phenomena at the tool-chip-workpiece interface in metal cutting remains a challenge. This paper aims at identifying a friction model and a heat partition model at this interface during the dry cutting of an AISI1045 steel with TiN coated carbide tools. A new tribometer, based on a modified pin-on-ring system, has been used in order to reach relevant values of pressures, temperatures, and sliding velocities. Additionally a 3D Arbitrary Lagrangian Eulerian model (A.L.E.) numerical model simulating the frictional test has been developed in order to extract local parameters around the spherical pin, such as average contact pressure, average local sliding velocity, and average contact temperature, from experimental macroscopic measurements. A large range of sliding velocities [0.083–5 m/s] has been investigated. It has been shown that friction coefficient and heat partition coefficient are mainly dependant on local sliding velocity at the interface. Three friction regimes have been identified. These experimental and numerical results provide a better understanding of the tribological phenomena along the tool-chip-workpiece interfaces in dry machining of an AISI 1045 steel with a TiN coated carbide tool. Finally a new friction model and heat partition model has been developed for implementation in a numerical cutting model.


2010 ◽  
Vol 42 ◽  
pp. 170-174
Author(s):  
Cheng Guang Zhang ◽  
Xue Ling Yang ◽  
Bo Zhao

The experiment of ultrasonic assisted pulse electrochemical compound finishing is carried in this paper. The machining principle of the compound finishing is discussed in this paper. Processing experiments of compound finishing are carried out to study the effects of the main processing para- meters, including the particle size, the ultrasonic vibration amplitude, the minimum gap between the tool head and workpiece and the pulse voltage, on the material removal rate and the surface quality for hard and brittle metal materials. The curves of the corresponding relationships are also obtained. The study indicates that the processing velocity, machining accuracy and surface quality can be improved under the compound finishing, obtaining the processing technology conductions of the compound finishing. Introductions


Author(s):  
Chunhui Chung ◽  
Glenn Melendez ◽  
Imin Kao

Wafers made of materials such as silicon, III-V and II-VI compounds, and optoelectronic materials, require high-degree of surface quality in order to increase the yield in micro-electronics fabrication to produce IC chips and devices. Measures of properties of surface quality of wafers include: nanotopography, surface morphology, global planarization, total thickness variation (TTV) and warp. Due to the reduction of feature size in micro-electronics fabrication, the requirements of such properties become more and more stringent. To meet such requirements, the wafer manufacturing processes of brittle semiconductor materials, such as slicing, lapping, grinding, and polishing have been continually improved. In this paper, the lapping process of wafer surface treatment is studied with experimental results of surface roughness and material removal rate. In order to improve the performance of lapping process, effects of mixed abrasive grits in the slurry of the free abrasive machining (FAM) processes are studied using a single-sided wafer-lapping machine. Under the same slurry density, experiments employing different mixing ratios of large and small abrasive grits, and various normal loadings on the wafer surface applied through a jig are conducted for parameter study. With various mixing ratios and loadings, observations and measurements such as the total amount of material removed, material removal rate, surface roughness, and relative angular velocity are presented and discussed in this paper. The experiments show that the half-half mixing ratio of abrasives removes more material than other mixing ratios under the same conditions, but with a higher surface roughness. The results of this study can provide a good reference to the FAM processes that practitioners use today by exploiting different mixing ratios and loadings of abrasive slurry in the manufacturing processes.


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