Abstract

Highly accurate marble processing is increasingly needed to comply with tight parametric/geometric tolerances and surface integrity specifications encountered while structuring, sculpture, and decorating. In this study, a new approach based on the artificial neural network technique is evaluated for the prediction of process parameters in the machining of white Calacatta–Carrara marble. The rotation speed, feed speed, drill bit diameter, drill bit height, number of pecking cycles, and drilling depth were considered as input factors. Corresponding surface roughness, hole circularity, hole cylindricity, and hole-location error were sought in output. A series of experiments was carried out using a 5-axes computer numerical control vertical machining center (OMAG) to obtain the data used for the training and testing of the artificial neural network with reasonable accuracy, under varying machining conditions. A MATLAB TM interface was developed to predict surface roughness and geometric defects (circularity, cylindricity, and localization). A 6 × 4 size multilayered neural network was developed. The number of iterations was 1000 and no smoothing factor was used. The drill quality (hole-location error, hole circularity, and hole cylindricity) and the surface roughness were modeled and evaluated individually. One hidden layer used for all models, with the number of neurons for all the responses being executed separately, was 12 while the number of neurons in the hidden layer, with all the responses executed together, was 14. In conclusion, from the obtained verified experimentally optimization results, the errors are all within acceptable ranges, which, again, confirm that the artificial neural network technique is an efficient and accurate method in predicting responses in drilling.

Highlights

  • Through a multi-purpose procedure, marble is commonly processed to serve for wall and stair covering, structures, decoration, and artistic sculpture

  • Surface roughness is an indicator of surface quality and one of the most specified customer requirements in a machining process.[20]

  • Roughness can be evaluated through different parameters, such as mean roughness (Ra), root mean square, roughness (Rq), and maximum peak-to-valley roughness (Ry or Rmax).[25]

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Summary

Introduction

Through a multi-purpose procedure, marble is commonly processed to serve for wall and stair covering, structures, decoration, and artistic sculpture. If the production parameters are not chosen correctly, excessive wear of the cutting tools is observed and the quality of the surface deteriorates.[19] Ulas Caydas and Hascalık[20] developed the ANN and the regression model to predict surface roughness in the abrasive water jet machining process. Machining parameters such as displacement speed, separation distance, water jet pressure, abrasive grain size, and abrasive flow were considered as model variables for the development of predictive models. The proposed engineering solution to improve cutting quality according to cutting conditions and minimizing, thereby, roughness and geometric defects (circularity, cylindricity, and localization) can be considered as a new contribution to the machining research

Experimental study
Evaluation of the hole quality
Design factors
Conclusion
Full Text
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