Abstract

With the help of an Assisting Electrode (AE), non-conductive ceramics can be machined using Electrical Discharge Machining (EDM) process. The AE helps start the EDM process and the intrinsic conductive layer (ICL) ensures that the electrical contact between the workpiece and the generator is maintained. However, the understanding of EDM process of non-conductive ceramics is limited due to the typical characteristic of the process: the geometric dimension of the discharge region is limited to few micrometers and the duration of the dielectric discharge is in the range of few microseconds making it difficult to directly observe the spark and the associated crater formation phenomenon. Analyzing the electrical signals during the EDM process could provide an insight of the process. This paper presents a study on analyzing the electric pulses occurring during the EDM process of a conductive workpiece (copper) and a non-conductive workpiece (Si3N4 ceramics). Typical pulses occurring during the EDM of a metal and a non-conductive ceramics are identified with the signal recorded at a sampling rate of 2.5 GS/s. Sampling rate of 25 MS/s is used to monitor the pulses occurring while machining a hole with depth of 1 mm. The pulses during EDM of non-conductive materials are significantly different than those during EDM of metals. Four most outstanding differences have been identified in terms of the ringing behavior of the voltage signal, the recharge time required to reach the set value of open voltage, the presence of the reverse current and the value of the peak current detected in case of Si3N4. The pulses monitored with lower sampling frequency was characterized and discriminated into sparks, arcs and short circuits. The percentage of the discriminated pulses for varying machining depth of the test structure has been presented.

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