4.6 Article

Combined experimental and numerical analysis of critical loading conditions for hard metal tool damage in titanium milling

Journal

JOURNAL OF MANUFACTURING PROCESSES
Volume 77, Issue -, Pages 125-137

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmapro.2022.02.059

Keywords

Finite element modelling; Titanium milling; Cyclic loading; Damage-critical load regimes; Hard metal; Round cutting inserts

Funding

  1. Frontrunner-Initiative of the project Frontrunner: Integrated, data driven development for Cutting Tools [861280]
  2. COMET program within the K2 Center Integrated Computational Material, Process and Product Engineering (IC-MPPE) [859480]
  3. Austrian Federal Ministry for Climate Action, Environment, Energy, Mobility, Innovation and Technology (BMK)
  4. Austrian Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs (BMDW)
  5. federal state of Styria
  6. federal state of Upper Austria
  7. federal state of Tyrol

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The present study investigates the thermal and mechanical tool loading of an indexed cutter with round cutting inserts. The finite element model helps establish the linkage between material damage in laboratory specimens and tool degradation in cutting experiments. The findings suggest that the investigated process conditions are close to the limit of safe tool application.
The present work investigates an indexed cutter with round cutting inserts manufactured from hard metal grade M10 with 10 wt% Co binder and WC grain size of 2 mu m used for the application of milling the titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V. The focus is set on the cyclic thermomechanical loading in combination with tool degradation. For this sake, a combined 2D and 3D finite element modelling approach is introduced in order to determine the thermal and mechanical tool loading locally resolved and to reveal the specifics of a round cutting insert geometry. The finite element model allows establishing the linkage between the material damage observed in uniaxially loaded laboratory specimens with real tool degradation observed in cutting experiments for the calculated critical loading conditions. For the investigated round insert with 10 mm diameter applied in a cutting operation with 55 m min(-1) cutting speed and 0.125 mm feed per tooth, a maximum cutting edge temperature between 600 degrees C and 700 degrees C and stress amplitudes between 1500MPa and 2000 MPa at a stress ratio R-sigma < - 4 are calculated. This loading is close to the load limit for cavity formation and accumulation in M10 which for the temperature of 700 degrees C and a stress ratio R-sigma = - infinity was experimentally found to be at a stress range of 1500 MPa. This reveals that the investigated process conditions are close to the limit of safe tool application which is in accordance with findings from cutting tests. The presented approach provides a novel and highly valuable method for future tool material and cutting process development and research.

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