Abstract

Forging dies are crucial in forging to manufacture accurate workpieces. These dies are generally made of AISI H steel series and hardened and tempered medium carbon alloy steel. Dies are processed by using high-speed milling + polishing or electrical discharge machining + polishing. The surface quality of the workpiece depends on the surface properties of these dies, where surface roughness, material hardness, and wear evolution of their surfaces are critical aspects to consider. This research analyzes different wire electrical discharge machining surface conditions combined with polishing treatment to describe their influence on friction and wear. Wire electrical discharge machining defines the disks’ surface properties in finishing and roughing conditions, and polishing treatment varies in time and paper sand depending on the roughness. Abbott-Firestone curves and Rsk-Rku roughness parameters characterize the surface roughness of each studied configuration. Room temperature pin-on-disk tests were performed to analyze friction coefficients and wear rate for AISI 1045 pins and AISI H13 disks. On average, the highest (0.284) and the lowest (0.201) friction coefficients were found for the combination of finishing wire electrical discharge machining + polishing and roughing wire electrical discharge machining conditions, respectively. Scanning electron microscope images were taken to describe the wear tracks and pin degradation for different sliding abrasive configurations. The diagram correlating the surface morphology and the friction coefficient predicts the wear damage on initial surface conditions, which is crucial in the forging industry to determine tool maintenance or replacement.

Highlights

  • Forging is a plastic forming process broadly used in different industry sectors to manufacture safety workpieces [1]

  • Surface abrasion, and surface roughness are analyzed to describe the behavior of the four mentioned surface conditions

  • The friction values are evaluated with the pin-on-disk and the experimental tests are repeated four times per surface condition to analyze the friction coefficient at the stationary phase

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Forging is a plastic forming process broadly used in different industry sectors to manufacture safety workpieces [1]. The forging dies are one of the main components of the process [2], manufactured from tool steels corresponding to the AISI H series (hot working steels). There are two routes to manufacturing hot forging dies of AISI H13: high-speed milling or electrical discharge machining (EDM). In both cases, the finishing is done by polishing [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]

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