Título
Physical modelling with experimental validation of high ductility metal cutting chip formation illustrated by copper machiningAutor-a
Autor-a (de otra institución)
Otras instituciones
University of LeedsVersión
PostprintTipo de documento
ArtículoFin de la fecha de embargo
2024-02-28Idioma
InglésDerechos
© 2021 Elsevier Ltd.Acceso
Acceso embargadoVersión de la editorial
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmachtools.2021.103847Publicado en
International Journal of Machine Tools and Manufacture. Vol. 173. N artículo 103847, 2022Editorial
Elsevier Ltd.Palabras clave
Metal machining
Mechanical threshold stress model
Friction model
Force measurement ... [+]
Mechanical threshold stress model
Friction model
Force measurement ... [+]
Metal machining
Mechanical threshold stress model
Friction model
Force measurement
Chip thickness measurement
Hardness testing [-]
Mechanical threshold stress model
Friction model
Force measurement
Chip thickness measurement
Hardness testing [-]
Resumen
This paper addresses problems of predicting chip formation in high strain machining conditions. A complete physical model of chip formation requires both plasticity and chip/tool friction models. Fric ... [+]
This paper addresses problems of predicting chip formation in high strain machining conditions. A complete physical model of chip formation requires both plasticity and chip/tool friction models. Friction models are commonly partly phenomenological, with friction coefficients measured from the conditions in which the models are applied. This paper’s thesis is that friction emerges from the plastic response of the chip material in contact with the cutting tool. Extremely large strains are generated in the contact region. In the case of machining highly ductile metals large strains also occur in the bulk of the chip. This paper applies a Mechanical Threshold Stress plasticity model extended to high strains (equivalent strains >5) to simulating chip formation in copper machining, without assuming measured values of friction coefficients. In the case of copper machining there is not a unified source of experimental knowledge against which to validate simulations. There is a need to provide such a source. This paper reports extensive results from machining three coppers in general engineering conditions. At all cutting speeds there remains a systematic difference between the simulated and experimental chip thicknesses. In addition, at low cutting speeds an experimental observation is that chip formation cycles between low and high thicknesses. The simulations do not predict this. The experiments show the cycling to occur when the chip thickness rises to 10 or more times the uncut thickness. It is speculated with some evidence that the cycling is associated with plastic failure rather than with strain hardening, as is currently commonly given as the explanation. Modelling large strain plasticity and failure of highly ductile metals, for metal machining simulations, remains incomplete. [-]
Sponsorship
Gobierno VascoID Proyecto
info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/GV/Elkartek 2020/KK-2020-00103/CAPV/Herramientas de corte inteligentes sensorizadas mediante recubrimientos funcionales/INTOOL IIColecciones
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