Abstract

In turning operations, the harmful small-amplitude but high-frequency chatter vibrations are identified in hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) experimental environment by means of the application of a multi-dimensional bisection method. The dummy workpiece clamped to the real main spindle is excited by contactless electromagnetic actuators and the response of the workpiece is detected by laser-based sensors. According to the present and the stored previous positions of the rotating workpiece, the desired cutting force characteristic along with the surface regeneration effect can be emulated by means of a high-performance real target computer. While the conventional experimental results in the HIL environment identify the stability limits of the cutting operation accurately only in a high-resolution grid of the technological parameters, the embedded bisection method reduces significantly both the size of the required grid and the time duration of the measurement by path following the boundaries of the linear loss of stability. Based on this technique, the experimental stability boundary of the emulated turning process is presented in a wide range of spindle speeds.

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