Abstract

In machining, the percentage of heat flux that enters the cutting tool can have a critical impact on tool wear especially in dry cutting or high speed machining. In previous work, heat partition was evaluated by iteratively reducing the secondary deformation zone heat flux to the tool until the finite element simulated temperatures matched the experimental measured rake face temperatures. This follow-on work quantifies the contribution of primary zone heat flux to heat partition in machining. In this study, an analytical model was used to evaluate the rise in chip temperature due to primary deformation zone heat source. The heat partition and thermal modelling on the rake face was then conducted with an appropriate initial rake face temperature. Thus primary zone heat loads and shear-force-derived secondary zone heat flux were applied in finite element transient heat transfer analysis to evaluate heat flux into the cutting tool. External dry turning of AISI/SAE 4140 with tungsten carbide-based multilayer TiCN/Al2O3-coated tools was conducted for a wide range of cutting speeds between 314 and 879 m/min. Results further support the dominance of secondary zone heat flux on heat partition. The contribution of primary zone heat generation to the cutting tool heat flux in machining was less than 9.5 %. These findings suggest that, to address the thermal problem in machining, research and development should also focus on reducing friction on the rake face (e.g. coating innovations) and reducing contact areas (e.g. rake face design) in addition to the modification of shear angle and hence primary zone heat intensity.

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