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Diese Schrift behandelt Spezialanwendungen von Schleifscheiben. Darunter fallen Anwendungen herkömmlicher Schleifscheiben für Spezialanwendungen, die über den üblichen Materialabtrag hinausgehen und auch die Entwicklung von Spezialschleifscheiben. Die Spezialanwendungen werden jeweils vorgestellt, die erzielten Ergebnisse diskutiert und kritisch reflektiert. Vor- und Nachteile sowie eventuelle Hemmnisse für die Erreichung einer Serien-reife werden beleuchtet. Nach der technologischen Bewertung erfolgt eine Betrachtung der Nachhaltigkeit der Spezialanwendungen, um eine abschließende Beurteilung zu ermöglichen, welche Konzepte sowohl technologisch also auch ökologisch und ökonomisch sinnvoll erscheinen und welche nicht. Hintergrund dieser Überlegungen ist die Tatsache, dass ein Spezialverfahren technologisch noch so interessant oder fähig sein mag, so lange es keine Vorteile für den Einsatz der Produkte oder eine Steigerung der Nachhaltigkeit der Produkte mit sich bringt, ist die Verfolgung des Spezialverfahrens nicht zu empfehlen. Daraus ergeben sich Empfehlungen für die Forschung und die Industrie zur Verfolgung bestimmter Spezialanwendungen.
In this paper, the effect of shot peening and cryogenic turning on the surface morphologyof the metastable austenitic stainless steel AISI 347 was investigated. In the shot peeningprocess, the coverage and the Almen intensity, which is related to the kinetic energy of thebeads, were varied. During cryogenic turning, the feed rate and the cutting edge radiuswere varied. The manufactured workpieces were characterized by X-ray diffractionregarding the phase fractions, the residual stresses and the full width at half maximum.The microhardness in the hardened surface layer was measured to compare the hardeningeffect of the processes. Furthermore, the surface topography was also characterized. Thenovelty of the research is the direct comparison of the two methods with identical work-pieces (same batch) and identical analytics. It was found that shot peening generally leadsto a more pronounced surface layer hardening, while cryogenic turning allows the hard-ening to be realized in a shorter process chain and also leads to a better surface topog-raphy. For both hardening processes it was demonstrated how the surface morphology canbe modified by adjusting the process parameter.
In micro milling, size effects such as the ratio of uncut chip thickness to cutting edge radius result to high mechanical stresses. The tools need to be able to withstand these, with as little tool wear as possible. Cemented carbides are currently the tool substrates of choice. Technical ceramics are highly wear resis- tant as well, but they are not yet used in micro milling. To utilize their potential in micro cutting pro- cesses, we previously identified Y-TZP as the best ceramic for this purpose. Compared to cemented carbide, they exhibit only marginal tool wear when micro milling PMMA. To investigate whether the 3Y-TZP characteristics influence the performance of all-ceramic micro end mills, three different substrate materials were used to manufacture tools that were tested by micro milling of PMMA. Further varied factors were the feed per tooth and the spindle speed. The initial cutting edge sharpness of the tools and the tool wear were used to quantify the results. One substrate was found to result in lower cutting edge radii and a more stable manufacturing process than the others. Also, a feed per tooth dependent wear behavior was observed.
Micro milling is a very flexible micro cutting process widely deployed to manufacture miniaturized parts. However, size effects occur when downscaling the cutting processes. They lead to higher mechanical loads on the tools and therefore increased tool wear. Micro milling tools are usually made of cemented carbides due to their mechanical strength and fine grain structure. Technical ceramics as alternative tool materials offer very good mechanical properties as well, with grain sizes well below 1 μ m. In conventional machining, they have proven to be able to reduce tool wear. To transfer these wear improvements to the micro scale, we manufactured all-ceramic micro end mills in previous studies ( ∅ 50 and ∅ 100 μm). Tools made from zirconia (Y-TZP) showed the sharpest cutting edges, and were the best performing in micro milling trials amongst the substrates tested. However, the advantages of the ceramic substrate could not be utilized for the brass and titanium materials tested in those studies. Therefore, in this study the capabilities of all-ceramic micro end mills ( ∅ 50 μ m) in different workpiece materials (1.4404, 1.7225, 3.1325 and PMMA GS) were researched. For the two steels and the aluminum alloy, the ceramic tools did not offer an improvement over the cemented carbide tools used as reference. For the thermoplastic PMMA however, significant improvements could be achieved by utilizing the Y-TZP ceramic tools: Less tool wear, less and more stable cutting forces, and higher surface qualities.
Additive manufacturing (AM) enables the production of components with a high degree of individualization at constant manufacturing effort, which is why additive manufacturing is increasingly applied in industrial processes. However, additively produced surfaces do not meet the requirements for functional surfaces, which is why subsequent machining is mandatory for most of AM-workpieces. Further, the performance of many functional surfaces can be enhanced by microstructuring. The combination of both AM and subtractive processes is referred to as hybrid manufacturing. In this paper, the hybrid manufacturing of AISI 316L is investigated. The two AM technologies laser-based powder bed fusion (L-PBF) and high-speed laser directed energy deposition (HS L-DED) are used to produce workpieces which are subsequently machined by micro milling (tool diameter d = 100 µm). The machining results were evaluated based on tool wear, burr formation, process forces and the generated topography. Those indicated differences in the machinability of materials produced by L-PBF and HS L-DED which were attributed to different microstructural properties.
Due to an excellent ratio of high strength to low density, as well as a strong corrosion resistance, the titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4 V is widely used in industrial applications. However, Ti-6Al-4 V is also a difficult-to-cut material because of its low thermal conductivity and high chemical reactivity, especially at elevated temperatures. As a result, machining Ti-6Al-4 V is characterized by high thermal loads and a rapidly progressing thermo-chemical induced tool wear. An adequate cooling strategy is essential to reduce the thermal load and therefore tool wear. Sub-zero metalworking fluids (MWF) which are applied at liquid state but at supply temperatures below the ambient temperature, offer great potential to significantly reduce the thermal load when machining Ti-6Al-4 V. Within the presented research, systematically varied sub-zero cooling strategies are applied when milling Ti-6Al-4 V. The influences of the supply temperature, as well as the volume flow and the outlet velocity are investigated aiming at a reduction of the thermal loads that occur during milling. The milling experiments were recorded using high-speed cameras in order to characterize the impact of the cooling strategies and resolve the behavior of the MWF. Additionally, the novel sub-zero cooling approach is compared to a cryogenic CO2 cooling strategy. The results show that the optimized sub-zero cooling strategy led to a sufficient reduction of the thermal loads and does outperform the cryogenic cooling even at elevated CO2 mass flows.
When machining metastable austenitic stainless steel with cryogenic cooling, a deformation-induced phase transformation from γ-austenite to α′-martensite can be realized in the workpiece subsurface. This leads to a higher microhardness and thus improved fatigue and wear resistance. A parametric and a non-parametric model were developed in order to investigate the correlation between the thermomechanical load in the workpiece subsurface and the resulting α′-martensite content. It was demonstrated that increasing passive forces and cutting forces promoted the deformation-induced phase transformation, while increasing temperatures had an inhibiting effect. The feed force had no significant influence on the α′-martensite content. With the proposed models it is now possible to estimate the α′-martensite content during cryogenic turning by means of in-situ measurement of process forces and temperatures.
Machining-induced residual stresses (MIRS) are a main driver for distortion of thin-walled monolithic aluminum workpieces. Before one can develop compensation techniques to minimize distortion, the effect of machining on the MIRS has to be fully understood. This means that not only an investigation of the effect of different process parameters on the MIRS is important. In addition, the repeatability of the MIRS resulting from the same machining condition has to be considered. In past research, statistical confidence of MIRS of machined samples was not focused on. In this paper, the repeatability of the MIRS for different machining modes, consisting of a variation in feed per tooth and cutting speed, is investigated. Multiple hole-drilling measurements within one sample and on different samples, machined with the same parameter set, were part of the investigations. Besides, the effect of two different clamping strategies on the MIRS was investigated. The results show that an overall repeatability for MIRS is given for stable machining (between 16 and 34% repeatability standard deviation of maximum normal MIRS), whereas instable machining, detected by vibrations in the force signal, has worse repeatability (54%) independent of the used clamping strategy. Further experiments, where a 1-mm-thick wafer was removed at the milled surface, show the connection between MIRS and their distortion. A numerical stress analysis reveals that the measured stress data is consistent with machining-induced distortion across and within different machining modes. It was found that more and/or deeper MIRS cause more distortion.
Analysis of dimensional accuracy for micro-milled areal material measures with kinematic simulation
(2021)
The calibration of areal surface topography measuring instruments is of high relevance to estimate the measurement uncertainty and to guarantee the traceability of the measurement results. Calibration structures for optical measuring instruments must be sufficiently small to determine the limits of the instruments.
Besides other methods, micro-milling is a suitable process for manufacturing areal material measures. For the manufacturing by micro-milling with ball end mills, the tool radius (effective cutter radius) is the corresponding limiting factor: if the tool radius is too large to penetrate the concave profile details without removing the surrounding material, deviations from the target geometry will occur. These deviations can be detected and excluded before experimental manufacturing with the aid of a kinematic simulation.
In this study, a kinematic simulation model for the prediction of the dimensional accuracy of micro-milled areal material measures is developed and validated. Subsequently, a radius study is conducted to determine how the tool radius r of the tool influences the dimensional accuracy of an areal crossed sinusoidal (ACS) geometry according to ISO 25178-70 [1] with a defined amplitude d and period length p. The resulting theoretical surface texture parameters are evaluated and compared to the target values. It was shown that the surface texture parameters deviate from the nominal values depending on the effective cutter radius used. Based on the results of the study, it can be determined with which effective tool radius the measurands Sa and Sq of the material measures are best met. The ideal effective radius for the application considered is between 50 and 75 μm.
In selective laser melting (SLM) the variation of process parameters significantly impacts the resulting workpiece characteristics. In this study, AISI 316L was manufactured by SLM with varying laser power, layer thickness, and hatch spacing. Contrary to most studies, the input energy density was kept constant for all variations by adjusting the scanning speed. The varied parameters were evaluated at two different input energy densities. The investigations reveal that a constant energy density with varying laser parameters results into considerable differences of the workpieces’ roughness, density, and microhardness. The density and the microhardness of the manufactured components can be improved by selecting appropriate parameters of the laser power, the layer thickness, and the hatch spacing. For this reason, the input energy density alone is no indicator for the resulting workpiece characteristics, but rather the ratio of scanning speed, layer thickness, or hatch spacing to laser power. Furthermore, it was found that the microhardness of an additively manufactured material correlates with its relative density. In the parameter study presented in this paper, relative densities of the additively manufactured workpieces of up to 99.9% were achieved.