Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Authors

  • Thilo Grove
  • Berend Denkena
  • Oliver Maiß
  • Alexander Krödel
  • Holger Schwab
  • Uta Kühn

External Research Organisations

  • Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research Dresden (IFW)
View graph of relations

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4883-4892
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Mechanical Science and Technology
Volume32
Issue number10
Early online date23 Oct 2018
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2018

Abstract

Titanium alloys are of significant importance in several high performance applications such as aerospace components or medical implants. Advances in additive technologies lead to an increase of additively built workpieces, offering new possibilities regarding functional integration and lightweight structures. Several authors have shown that microstructural, mechanical and thermal material properties differ significantly from those of cast alloys. Although additively produced parts are near net-shape, most of them are machined after the building process, to achieve the requirements regarding surface finish and dimensional accuracy. Titanium is generally known as a hardto- cut material due to its thermo-mechanical properties. Although there is a profound knowledge about the machinability of conventionally cast and wrought titanium alloys, there is a lack of understanding regarding the machining of additively built titanium. In this paper, the machinability of an additively built Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr alloy (Ti-5553) is analyzed regarding chip formation, cutting forces and tool wear. Three different generation methods, conventional wrought, selective laser melting and selective laser melting with in-process (insitu) heat treatment are investigated. It is shown that the machinability differs significantly compared to a conventional wrought alloy, which is linked to decreased contact length on the tool rake face and higher mechanical tool load (up to + 23 % force increase). Highest tool load is found for titanium alloy, which is built using selective laser melting and in-process heat treatment. Furthermore, the surface integrity after machining is analyzed regarding hardness, roughness and residual stresses. Hereby, high compressive residual stresses for additively built titanium with in-process heat treatment are obtained due to the higher mechanical tool load. Therefore, it could be shown that the generation method (e.g. selective laser melting) needs to be considered for the later process design in finish machining.

Keywords

    Machinability, Milling, Residual stress, SLM, Titanium

ASJC Scopus subject areas

Cite this

Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting. / Grove, Thilo; Denkena, Berend; Maiß, Oliver et al.
In: Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology, Vol. 32, No. 10, 10.2018, p. 4883-4892.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer review

Grove T, Denkena B, Maiß O, Krödel A, Schwab H, Kühn U. Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting. Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology. 2018 Oct;32(10):4883-4892. Epub 2018 Oct 23. doi: 10.1007/s12206-018-0936-8
Grove, Thilo ; Denkena, Berend ; Maiß, Oliver et al. / Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting. In: Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology. 2018 ; Vol. 32, No. 10. pp. 4883-4892.
Download
@article{7ebc14204cb046c493a172ad3ec7a5c0,
title = "Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting",
abstract = "Titanium alloys are of significant importance in several high performance applications such as aerospace components or medical implants. Advances in additive technologies lead to an increase of additively built workpieces, offering new possibilities regarding functional integration and lightweight structures. Several authors have shown that microstructural, mechanical and thermal material properties differ significantly from those of cast alloys. Although additively produced parts are near net-shape, most of them are machined after the building process, to achieve the requirements regarding surface finish and dimensional accuracy. Titanium is generally known as a hardto- cut material due to its thermo-mechanical properties. Although there is a profound knowledge about the machinability of conventionally cast and wrought titanium alloys, there is a lack of understanding regarding the machining of additively built titanium. In this paper, the machinability of an additively built Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr alloy (Ti-5553) is analyzed regarding chip formation, cutting forces and tool wear. Three different generation methods, conventional wrought, selective laser melting and selective laser melting with in-process (insitu) heat treatment are investigated. It is shown that the machinability differs significantly compared to a conventional wrought alloy, which is linked to decreased contact length on the tool rake face and higher mechanical tool load (up to + 23 % force increase). Highest tool load is found for titanium alloy, which is built using selective laser melting and in-process heat treatment. Furthermore, the surface integrity after machining is analyzed regarding hardness, roughness and residual stresses. Hereby, high compressive residual stresses for additively built titanium with in-process heat treatment are obtained due to the higher mechanical tool load. Therefore, it could be shown that the generation method (e.g. selective laser melting) needs to be considered for the later process design in finish machining.",
keywords = "Machinability, Milling, Residual stress, SLM, Titanium",
author = "Thilo Grove and Berend Denkena and Oliver Mai{\ss} and Alexander Kr{\"o}del and Holger Schwab and Uta K{\"u}hn",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018, The Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1007/s12206-018-0936-8",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "4883--4892",
journal = "Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology",
issn = "1738-494X",
publisher = "Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers",
number = "10",

}

Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Cutting mechanism and surface integrity in milling of Ti-5553 processed by selective laser melting

AU - Grove, Thilo

AU - Denkena, Berend

AU - Maiß, Oliver

AU - Krödel, Alexander

AU - Schwab, Holger

AU - Kühn, Uta

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018, The Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. Copyright: Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

PY - 2018/10

Y1 - 2018/10

N2 - Titanium alloys are of significant importance in several high performance applications such as aerospace components or medical implants. Advances in additive technologies lead to an increase of additively built workpieces, offering new possibilities regarding functional integration and lightweight structures. Several authors have shown that microstructural, mechanical and thermal material properties differ significantly from those of cast alloys. Although additively produced parts are near net-shape, most of them are machined after the building process, to achieve the requirements regarding surface finish and dimensional accuracy. Titanium is generally known as a hardto- cut material due to its thermo-mechanical properties. Although there is a profound knowledge about the machinability of conventionally cast and wrought titanium alloys, there is a lack of understanding regarding the machining of additively built titanium. In this paper, the machinability of an additively built Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr alloy (Ti-5553) is analyzed regarding chip formation, cutting forces and tool wear. Three different generation methods, conventional wrought, selective laser melting and selective laser melting with in-process (insitu) heat treatment are investigated. It is shown that the machinability differs significantly compared to a conventional wrought alloy, which is linked to decreased contact length on the tool rake face and higher mechanical tool load (up to + 23 % force increase). Highest tool load is found for titanium alloy, which is built using selective laser melting and in-process heat treatment. Furthermore, the surface integrity after machining is analyzed regarding hardness, roughness and residual stresses. Hereby, high compressive residual stresses for additively built titanium with in-process heat treatment are obtained due to the higher mechanical tool load. Therefore, it could be shown that the generation method (e.g. selective laser melting) needs to be considered for the later process design in finish machining.

AB - Titanium alloys are of significant importance in several high performance applications such as aerospace components or medical implants. Advances in additive technologies lead to an increase of additively built workpieces, offering new possibilities regarding functional integration and lightweight structures. Several authors have shown that microstructural, mechanical and thermal material properties differ significantly from those of cast alloys. Although additively produced parts are near net-shape, most of them are machined after the building process, to achieve the requirements regarding surface finish and dimensional accuracy. Titanium is generally known as a hardto- cut material due to its thermo-mechanical properties. Although there is a profound knowledge about the machinability of conventionally cast and wrought titanium alloys, there is a lack of understanding regarding the machining of additively built titanium. In this paper, the machinability of an additively built Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr alloy (Ti-5553) is analyzed regarding chip formation, cutting forces and tool wear. Three different generation methods, conventional wrought, selective laser melting and selective laser melting with in-process (insitu) heat treatment are investigated. It is shown that the machinability differs significantly compared to a conventional wrought alloy, which is linked to decreased contact length on the tool rake face and higher mechanical tool load (up to + 23 % force increase). Highest tool load is found for titanium alloy, which is built using selective laser melting and in-process heat treatment. Furthermore, the surface integrity after machining is analyzed regarding hardness, roughness and residual stresses. Hereby, high compressive residual stresses for additively built titanium with in-process heat treatment are obtained due to the higher mechanical tool load. Therefore, it could be shown that the generation method (e.g. selective laser melting) needs to be considered for the later process design in finish machining.

KW - Machinability

KW - Milling

KW - Residual stress

KW - SLM

KW - Titanium

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85055352935&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s12206-018-0936-8

DO - 10.1007/s12206-018-0936-8

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85055352935

VL - 32

SP - 4883

EP - 4892

JO - Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology

JF - Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology

SN - 1738-494X

IS - 10

ER -