Cutting temperature is reported to be a serious concern while grinding aerospace materials such as titanium alloy Ti6Al4V, which is having very low thermal conductivity. Segmented wheels designed with active abrasive regions and passive non-cutting slots have been proposed as a potential solution for thermal management in the grinding zone. Reduced accumulation of heat due to intermittency in cutting and enhanced dissipation through passive slots could exhibit improved temperature control even at dry grinding conditions. As the number of segments increased, the grinding force was significantly reduced for Ti6Al4V. Under the wet cutting condition, the segmented wheel could facilitate a more effective flow of cutting fluid into the passive slots, which is referred to as useful flow. However, there was a trade-off set by the number of segments, where an eight-segmented wheel showed superior thermal performance in comparison with the 32-segmented wheel. The reasoning of the same in terms of useful flow patterns and boundary layer thickness has been attempted in this paper.