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New advances in the machining of hard metals using physics-based modeling

Wybrane pełne teksty z tego czasopisma
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Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
The machining of hard metals historically has been understood to be challenging and costly due to its material properties (such as titanium’s low thermal conductivity and high hardness, and nickel’s rapid work-hardening and high strength at elevated temperatures) and limited understanding in industry of the physics behind chip formation and material removal. The achievement of meaningful cycle time reductions while maintaining part quality depends on a capability to model the physics of hard metal machining operations. With the help of a validated toolpath analysis model that can predict forces at each cutter location, cycle times and scrap can be reduced and machine breakdown can be avoided, all through off-line analysis. Productivity and process efficiency can be improved through simulation, drastically reducing testing setup and machining time. Physics-based modeling technology has been identified as a cost-effective solution for identifying optimum cutting speeds, enabling researchers and manufacturers to increase material removal rates, reduce machining costs, and enhance industry expertise in hard metal machining best practices. This paper presents new advances to physicsbased modeling that have been validated using experimental tests and comparisons with finite element milling simulations, used to compare different process parameters and resulting material removal rates, and successfully advance hard metal machining processes.
Rocznik
Strony
3--13
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 13 poz., rys., tab., wykr.
Twórcy
  • Third Wave Systems, Inc. 7900 West 78th Street Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN USA 55439
autor
  • Third Wave Systems, Inc. 7900 West 78th Street Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN USA 55439
autor
  • Third Wave Systems, Inc. 7900 West 78th Street Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN USA 55439
autor
  • Third Wave Systems, Inc. 7900 West 78th Street Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN USA 55439
autor
  • Third Wave Systems, Inc. 7900 West 78th Street Suite 300, Minneapolis, MN USA 55439
Bibliografia
  • 1. Stephenson D.A., Agapiou J.S., Metal Cutting Theory and Practice, Second Edition, CRC, Boca Raton, FL, 19, 2006.
  • 2. CG Tech, Vericut, www.cgtech.com/usa/products/.
  • 3. Diehl S.A., TrueMillr White Paper, www.surfware.com/truemill toolpath strategies.aspx
  • 4. DeVor R.E., Kline W.A., Zdeblick W.J., A Mechanistic Model for the Force System in End Milling with Application to Machining Airframe Structures, Proceedings of the 8th North American Manufacturing Research, 297, 1980.
  • 5. Nakayama K., Arai M., Takei K., Semi-empirical equations for three components ofresultant cutting force, Annals of the CIRP, 32, 1, 33–35, 1983.
  • 6. Brown C.A., A Practical Method for Estimating Forces from Tool-chip Contact Area, Annals of the CIRP, 32, 1, 91–95, 1983.
  • 7. Stephenson D.A., Agapiou J.S., Calculation of Main Cutting Edge Forces and Torque for Drills with Arbitrary Point Geometries, International Journal of Machine Tool Manufacturing, 32, 4, 521–538, 1992.
  • 8. Srinivas B.K., The Forces in Turning, SME Technical Paper, MR82-947, 1982.
  • 9. Siemens PLM Software, NX CAM, www.plm.automation.siemens.com/en us/products/nx/machining/machining/index.shtml.
  • 10. Dassault Systems, CATIA, www.3ds.com/products/catia/catia-discovery/.
  • 11. Predator Software Inc., Predator SDK, www.predator-software.com/virtualcnc.htm.
  • 12. Stephenson D.A., Bandopadhyay P., Process-Independent Force Characterization for Metal Cutting Simulation, Transactions of the ASME, 119, 1997.
  • 13. Caron Engineering, Inc., www.caron-eng.com.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-34142ef4-ca76-4cf4-80d9-b479945d02a7
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