Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftKonferenzaufsatz in FachzeitschriftForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Florian Pape
  • Haichao Liu
  • Lars Ellersiek
  • Alexander Kroedel
  • Berend Denkena
  • Gerhard Poll
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)51-57
Seitenumfang7
FachzeitschriftDefect and Diffusion Forum
Jahrgang414
Frühes Online-Datum24 Feb. 2022
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2022
Veranstaltung9th International Conference on Tribology in Manufacturing Processes and Joining by Plastic Deformation, ICTMP 2021 - Virtual, Online
Dauer: 24 Nov. 202126 Nov. 2021

Abstract

For the realization of efficient production processes, an understanding of the appropriate application of metal working fluids (MWF) is necessary. In addition to knowledge about the process-related aspect of chip transport and the macroscopic cooling effect, the characteristics and properties of the lubrication film thickness and the cooling conditions in the area of the secondary shear zone on the chip surface, i.e. in the direct vicinity of the material separation, represent a fundamental scientific issue within production technology. In particular, these areas generate a high proportion of heat during machining, so that the local friction phenomena have a significant influence on the resulting edge zone of the produced component and the thermomechanical load on the tool. Currently, there are no numerical models and methods for mapping and predicting the lubrication film thickness that can be used in the sense of a targeted design of the cooling lubricant supply. The aim is to transfer the methods from the field of tribology of machine elements, which have already led to significant knowledge gains in this discipline, to machining and couple them to approaches already established in machining. To this end, experiments on tribometers have been performed as a first step. For example, an oscillating pin-on-plate tribometer was used. In this setup, a steel plate is doing oscillating motion against a fixed ball (diameter of 6 mm) under a defined load. The frictional force is recorded during the test. A MWF in a heated tank is used for the lubricant. Additional investigations on the film thickness were performed on an optical EHL (elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication) tribometer. In this setup, a ball rolls on a glass-disc and the resulting film thickness is measured by interferometry. For comparison, the influence of the MWF on the chip formation process in metal cutting was investigated on a special test rig (machine tool). This test rig allows high speed imaging and force measurements of an orthogonal cutting process while using MWFs. The first results show a reduced contact length between chip and tool as well as lower process forces for processes with MWFs compared to dry cutting processes. In future investigations, this test rig will be applied for the identification of the local friction coefficient between chip and tool. The data gained from the cutting test are compared with the output of the tribological test rigs.

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

Zitieren

Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes. / Pape, Florian; Liu, Haichao; Ellersiek, Lars et al.
in: Defect and Diffusion Forum, Jahrgang 414, 2022, S. 51-57.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftKonferenzaufsatz in FachzeitschriftForschungPeer-Review

Pape, F, Liu, H, Ellersiek, L, Kroedel, A, Denkena, B & Poll, G 2022, 'Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes', Defect and Diffusion Forum, Jg. 414, S. 51-57. https://doi.org/10.4028/p-dnly6l
Pape, F., Liu, H., Ellersiek, L., Kroedel, A., Denkena, B., & Poll, G. (2022). Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes. Defect and Diffusion Forum, 414, 51-57. https://doi.org/10.4028/p-dnly6l
Pape F, Liu H, Ellersiek L, Kroedel A, Denkena B, Poll G. Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes. Defect and Diffusion Forum. 2022;414:51-57. Epub 2022 Feb 24. doi: 10.4028/p-dnly6l
Pape, Florian ; Liu, Haichao ; Ellersiek, Lars et al. / Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes. in: Defect and Diffusion Forum. 2022 ; Jahrgang 414. S. 51-57.
Download
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T1 - Influence of Metal Working Fluids in Cutting Processes

AU - Pape, Florian

AU - Liu, Haichao

AU - Ellersiek, Lars

AU - Kroedel, Alexander

AU - Denkena, Berend

AU - Poll, Gerhard

N1 - Funding Information: The authors appreciate the funding of this work within the Priority Program 2231 “Efficient cooling, lubrication and transportation – coupled mechanical and fluid-dynamical simulation methods for efficient production processes (FLUSIMPRO)” by the German Research Foundation (DFG) – project number 439904924.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - For the realization of efficient production processes, an understanding of the appropriate application of metal working fluids (MWF) is necessary. In addition to knowledge about the process-related aspect of chip transport and the macroscopic cooling effect, the characteristics and properties of the lubrication film thickness and the cooling conditions in the area of the secondary shear zone on the chip surface, i.e. in the direct vicinity of the material separation, represent a fundamental scientific issue within production technology. In particular, these areas generate a high proportion of heat during machining, so that the local friction phenomena have a significant influence on the resulting edge zone of the produced component and the thermomechanical load on the tool. Currently, there are no numerical models and methods for mapping and predicting the lubrication film thickness that can be used in the sense of a targeted design of the cooling lubricant supply. The aim is to transfer the methods from the field of tribology of machine elements, which have already led to significant knowledge gains in this discipline, to machining and couple them to approaches already established in machining. To this end, experiments on tribometers have been performed as a first step. For example, an oscillating pin-on-plate tribometer was used. In this setup, a steel plate is doing oscillating motion against a fixed ball (diameter of 6 mm) under a defined load. The frictional force is recorded during the test. A MWF in a heated tank is used for the lubricant. Additional investigations on the film thickness were performed on an optical EHL (elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication) tribometer. In this setup, a ball rolls on a glass-disc and the resulting film thickness is measured by interferometry. For comparison, the influence of the MWF on the chip formation process in metal cutting was investigated on a special test rig (machine tool). This test rig allows high speed imaging and force measurements of an orthogonal cutting process while using MWFs. The first results show a reduced contact length between chip and tool as well as lower process forces for processes with MWFs compared to dry cutting processes. In future investigations, this test rig will be applied for the identification of the local friction coefficient between chip and tool. The data gained from the cutting test are compared with the output of the tribological test rigs.

AB - For the realization of efficient production processes, an understanding of the appropriate application of metal working fluids (MWF) is necessary. In addition to knowledge about the process-related aspect of chip transport and the macroscopic cooling effect, the characteristics and properties of the lubrication film thickness and the cooling conditions in the area of the secondary shear zone on the chip surface, i.e. in the direct vicinity of the material separation, represent a fundamental scientific issue within production technology. In particular, these areas generate a high proportion of heat during machining, so that the local friction phenomena have a significant influence on the resulting edge zone of the produced component and the thermomechanical load on the tool. Currently, there are no numerical models and methods for mapping and predicting the lubrication film thickness that can be used in the sense of a targeted design of the cooling lubricant supply. The aim is to transfer the methods from the field of tribology of machine elements, which have already led to significant knowledge gains in this discipline, to machining and couple them to approaches already established in machining. To this end, experiments on tribometers have been performed as a first step. For example, an oscillating pin-on-plate tribometer was used. In this setup, a steel plate is doing oscillating motion against a fixed ball (diameter of 6 mm) under a defined load. The frictional force is recorded during the test. A MWF in a heated tank is used for the lubricant. Additional investigations on the film thickness were performed on an optical EHL (elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication) tribometer. In this setup, a ball rolls on a glass-disc and the resulting film thickness is measured by interferometry. For comparison, the influence of the MWF on the chip formation process in metal cutting was investigated on a special test rig (machine tool). This test rig allows high speed imaging and force measurements of an orthogonal cutting process while using MWFs. The first results show a reduced contact length between chip and tool as well as lower process forces for processes with MWFs compared to dry cutting processes. In future investigations, this test rig will be applied for the identification of the local friction coefficient between chip and tool. The data gained from the cutting test are compared with the output of the tribological test rigs.

KW - Cutting processes

KW - Friction

KW - Metal Working Fluid

KW - Tribological methods

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JO - Defect and Diffusion Forum

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SN - 1012-0386

T2 - 9th International Conference on Tribology in Manufacturing Processes and Joining by Plastic Deformation, ICTMP 2021

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