Abstract

This research investigates the effect of machining parameters on material removal rate, electrode wear ratio, and gap clearance of macro deep holes with a depth-to-diameter ratio over four. The experiments were carried out using electrical discharge machining with side flushing and multi-aperture flushing to improve the machining performance and surface integrity. The machining parameters were pulse on-time, pulse off-time, current, and electrode rotation. Response surface methodology and the desirability function were used to optimize the electrical discharge machining parameters. The results showed that pulse on-time, current, and electrode rotation were positively correlated with the material removal rate. The electrode wear ratio was inversely correlated with pulse on-time and electrode rotation but positively correlated with current. Gap clearance was positively correlated with pulse on-time but inversely correlated with pulse off-time, current, and electrode rotation. The optimal machining condition of electrical discharge machining with side flushing was 100 µs pulse on-time, 20 µs pulse off-time, 15 A current, and 70 rpm electrode rotation; and that of electrical discharge machining with multi-aperture flushing was 130 µs, 2 µs, 15 A, and 70 rpm. The novelty of this research lies in the use of multi-aperture flushing to improve the machining performance, enable a more uniform GC profile, and minimize the incidence of recast layer.

Highlights

  • Electrical discharge machining (EDM) is a non-traditional machining method that relies on the electro-thermal effect of the discharge current between the electrode and workpiece to remove material in dielectric fluid

  • MRR of EDM with side flushing (MRRsf) was significantly correlated to pulse on-time (A), current (C), current squared (C2 ), and interaction between A and C

  • The reduced multiple regression model for MRRsf is expressed in Equation (6)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Electrical discharge machining (EDM) is a non-traditional machining method that relies on the electro-thermal effect of the discharge current between the electrode and workpiece to remove material in dielectric fluid. EDM is used to fabricate machining holes in tool materials [1,2,3]. There are three groups of EDM holes, depending on the cross-sectional area of the electrode: micro (cross-sectional area of electrode

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call