An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting

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Original languageEnglish
Article number756
JournalMachines
Volume10
Issue number9
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2022

Abstract

In the present study, the damage mechanisms that cause premature failure of sapphire water jet orifices were analyzed using a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. Depending on the operating behavior and local conditions, the service life of orifices for high-pressure water jet cutting often deviates considerably from the manufacturer’s specifications. Literature states a typical service life of 50 to 100 h, while in some cases, premature failure after a few hours or even minutes of operation can be observed. The focus of this paper is on the interaction of particles that impact the orifice surface but also the effect of faulty orifice assembly is taken into account. To estimate the risk of failure, the stress distribution in critical parts of the orifice were calculated via FEM, which is fed with experimental data. The modified Mohr failure criterion was then used to evaluate the stress distributions with respect to the possible failure of the orifice jewel. The results revealed that the risk of damage caused by excessive assembly preload forces is marginal. The stress caused by the impact of particles of different sizes is up to four orders of magnitude higher than the stress caused by assembly forces and is therefore identified as the main risk for orifices to fail prematurely. Experimental data shows mainly particles of calcium carbonate and iron–aluminum silicates, which are compounds that originate from the process water itself. It is demonstrated that particles are more critical than formerly assumed in the literature. This paper identifies particles with a diameter of more than 10 µm as critical when there are no other loads present. In operation, even particles as small as 2 µm in diameter can cause damage to the orifice jewel. To prevent premature orifice failure due to foreign particles, water filtration with a 2 µm mesh is recommended, while future research needs to focus on the interior cutting head design to prevent precipitation from the process water.

Keywords

    edge chipping, experimental, finite element method, high-pressure, orifice damage, particle impact, precipitation, sapphire orifices, water jet cutting

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An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting. / Mlinaric, Markus; Jemaa, Hassen; Hassel, Thomas et al.
In: Machines, Vol. 10, No. 9, 756, 01.09.2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Mlinaric M, Jemaa H, Hassel T, Maier HJ. An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting. Machines. 2022 Sept 1;10(9):756. doi: 10.3390/machines10090756
Mlinaric, Markus ; Jemaa, Hassen ; Hassel, Thomas et al. / An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting. In: Machines. 2022 ; Vol. 10, No. 9.
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title = "An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting",
abstract = "In the present study, the damage mechanisms that cause premature failure of sapphire water jet orifices were analyzed using a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. Depending on the operating behavior and local conditions, the service life of orifices for high-pressure water jet cutting often deviates considerably from the manufacturer{\textquoteright}s specifications. Literature states a typical service life of 50 to 100 h, while in some cases, premature failure after a few hours or even minutes of operation can be observed. The focus of this paper is on the interaction of particles that impact the orifice surface but also the effect of faulty orifice assembly is taken into account. To estimate the risk of failure, the stress distribution in critical parts of the orifice were calculated via FEM, which is fed with experimental data. The modified Mohr failure criterion was then used to evaluate the stress distributions with respect to the possible failure of the orifice jewel. The results revealed that the risk of damage caused by excessive assembly preload forces is marginal. The stress caused by the impact of particles of different sizes is up to four orders of magnitude higher than the stress caused by assembly forces and is therefore identified as the main risk for orifices to fail prematurely. Experimental data shows mainly particles of calcium carbonate and iron–aluminum silicates, which are compounds that originate from the process water itself. It is demonstrated that particles are more critical than formerly assumed in the literature. This paper identifies particles with a diameter of more than 10 µm as critical when there are no other loads present. In operation, even particles as small as 2 µm in diameter can cause damage to the orifice jewel. To prevent premature orifice failure due to foreign particles, water filtration with a 2 µm mesh is recommended, while future research needs to focus on the interior cutting head design to prevent precipitation from the process water.",
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author = "Markus Mlinaric and Hassen Jemaa and Thomas Hassel and Maier, {Hans J{\"u}rgen}",
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T1 - An Experimental and Numerical Study of Damage Due to Particle Impact on Sapphire Orifices Used in High-Pressure Water Jet Cutting

AU - Mlinaric, Markus

AU - Jemaa, Hassen

AU - Hassel, Thomas

AU - Maier, Hans Jürgen

N1 - Funding Information: The publication of this article was funded by the Open Access Fund of Leibniz Universität Hannover.

PY - 2022/9/1

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N2 - In the present study, the damage mechanisms that cause premature failure of sapphire water jet orifices were analyzed using a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. Depending on the operating behavior and local conditions, the service life of orifices for high-pressure water jet cutting often deviates considerably from the manufacturer’s specifications. Literature states a typical service life of 50 to 100 h, while in some cases, premature failure after a few hours or even minutes of operation can be observed. The focus of this paper is on the interaction of particles that impact the orifice surface but also the effect of faulty orifice assembly is taken into account. To estimate the risk of failure, the stress distribution in critical parts of the orifice were calculated via FEM, which is fed with experimental data. The modified Mohr failure criterion was then used to evaluate the stress distributions with respect to the possible failure of the orifice jewel. The results revealed that the risk of damage caused by excessive assembly preload forces is marginal. The stress caused by the impact of particles of different sizes is up to four orders of magnitude higher than the stress caused by assembly forces and is therefore identified as the main risk for orifices to fail prematurely. Experimental data shows mainly particles of calcium carbonate and iron–aluminum silicates, which are compounds that originate from the process water itself. It is demonstrated that particles are more critical than formerly assumed in the literature. This paper identifies particles with a diameter of more than 10 µm as critical when there are no other loads present. In operation, even particles as small as 2 µm in diameter can cause damage to the orifice jewel. To prevent premature orifice failure due to foreign particles, water filtration with a 2 µm mesh is recommended, while future research needs to focus on the interior cutting head design to prevent precipitation from the process water.

AB - In the present study, the damage mechanisms that cause premature failure of sapphire water jet orifices were analyzed using a combined experimental and finite element modeling (FEM) approach. Depending on the operating behavior and local conditions, the service life of orifices for high-pressure water jet cutting often deviates considerably from the manufacturer’s specifications. Literature states a typical service life of 50 to 100 h, while in some cases, premature failure after a few hours or even minutes of operation can be observed. The focus of this paper is on the interaction of particles that impact the orifice surface but also the effect of faulty orifice assembly is taken into account. To estimate the risk of failure, the stress distribution in critical parts of the orifice were calculated via FEM, which is fed with experimental data. The modified Mohr failure criterion was then used to evaluate the stress distributions with respect to the possible failure of the orifice jewel. The results revealed that the risk of damage caused by excessive assembly preload forces is marginal. The stress caused by the impact of particles of different sizes is up to four orders of magnitude higher than the stress caused by assembly forces and is therefore identified as the main risk for orifices to fail prematurely. Experimental data shows mainly particles of calcium carbonate and iron–aluminum silicates, which are compounds that originate from the process water itself. It is demonstrated that particles are more critical than formerly assumed in the literature. This paper identifies particles with a diameter of more than 10 µm as critical when there are no other loads present. In operation, even particles as small as 2 µm in diameter can cause damage to the orifice jewel. To prevent premature orifice failure due to foreign particles, water filtration with a 2 µm mesh is recommended, while future research needs to focus on the interior cutting head design to prevent precipitation from the process water.

KW - edge chipping

KW - experimental

KW - finite element method

KW - high-pressure

KW - orifice damage

KW - particle impact

KW - precipitation

KW - sapphire orifices

KW - water jet cutting

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85138652952&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3390/machines10090756

DO - 10.3390/machines10090756

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85138652952

VL - 10

JO - Machines

JF - Machines

IS - 9

M1 - 756

ER -

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