Abstract

Nanometric cutting involves materials removal and deformation evolution in the surface at nanometer scale. At this length scale, atomistic simulation is a very useful tool to study the cutting process. In this study, large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with the model size up to 10 millions atoms have been performed to study three-dimensional nanometric cutting of copper. The EAM potential and Morse potential are used, respectively, to compute the interaction between workpiece atoms and the interactions between workpiece atoms and tool atoms. The material behavior, surface and subsurface deformation, dislocation movement, and cutting forces during the cutting processes are studied. We show that the MD simulation model of nanometric cutting has to be large enough to eliminate the boundary effect. Moreover, the cutting speed and the cutting depth have to be considered in determining a suitable model size for the MD simulations. We have observed that the nanometric cutting process is accompanied with complex material deformation, dislocation formation, and movement. We find that as the cutting depth decreases, the tangential cutting force decreases faster than the normal cutting force. The simulation results reveal that as the cutting depth decreases, the specific cutting force increases, i.e., “size effect” exists in nanometric cutting.

Highlights

  • Nanometric cutting is a tool-based materials removal technique to remove materials at nanometer scale thickness in the surface

  • We have performed a series of large-scale 3D molecular dynamics (MD) simulations using the EAM potential to study the nanometric cutting process

  • It is shown that the 2-million-atom model, though quite large compared with the models used in the previously reported studies, is not large enough to eliminate the boundary effect for the simulation conditions used

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Summary

Introduction

Nanometric cutting is a tool-based materials removal technique to remove materials at nanometer scale thickness in the surface. If the model is not large enough, the widely used fixed-atoms boundary in MD simulations may have strong effect on the dislocation movement and will affect the motion of atoms at the cutting surface. Another limitation of previous studies on MD simulations of nanometric cutting of metals is that the Morse potential has been widely adopted to model the interatomic force between metal atoms.

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