Abstract

Increasing miniaturisation has significantly increased demand for highly accurate small parts to be machined. Micro milling presents a viable method for series machining parts such as miniature heat exchangers or fuel injectors. Micro end mill tool wear, however, is considerably more difficult to monitor than its macro counterpart, and the tools often fail due to chipping or shaft failure. High tool breakage rates make costs unpredictable and machining times inefficient. Conversely, macro end mill wear is well characterised, and the typical wear curve well understood.The aim of this work is to elongate the steady state region (SSR) of the wear curve for micro end mills, as this is the practical life of the tool. Coatings can be applied to achieve this, improving wear rates and cutting performance.This study examines the wear that took place during straight-slot machining with 500 μm micro end mills. This was then compared with observed wear mechanisms on the macro scale. The length of the SSR was used to evaluate the ability of various new coatings to extend the working tool life. The relative predictability in the SSR allows tool paths to be modified to account for changing tool geometry.The results demonstrate that for micro-mills, the SSR could be elongated, in spite of less predictable wear mechanisms. Overall, this work presents a successful attempt to manipulate the wear curve for micro end mills and highlights the importance of developing an understanding of the wear mechanisms taking place for micro-mills as compared with macro-mills.

Highlights

  • With increased miniaturisation of systems and components, micro milling has emerged as a popular process for manufacturing small components

  • This study examines the wear that took place during straight-slot machining with 500 μm micro end mills

  • Tool wear for both flank and rake face are provided for NiMo alloy and titanium

Read more

Summary

Introduction

With increased miniaturisation of systems and components, micro milling has emerged as a popular process for manufacturing small components. It provides a pathway to mass-production through micro-mould manufacturing [1] Both the medical and aerospace industries make use of materials such as titanium and high-performance superalloys. Nickel-molybdenum alloys, often termed “nickel superalloys” have applications in chemical exhaust processing and corrosive environments for producing heat exchangers or pollution control – such as flue desulfurization systems or fans/fan housings. These are typically difficultto-machine even on the macro-scale tools, but present further complexity in micro milling as burring and crystal irregularities lead to regular catastrophic fracture of the tools. These high tool fracture rates lead to poor machining efficiency, increased costs and difficulties predicting machining times

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
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