Título
The impact of airborne emissions from coolants and lubricants on machining costsAutor-a (de otra institución)
Otras instituciones
University of LjubljanaVersión
Version publicada
Derechos
© 2024 The AuthorsAcceso
Acceso abiertoVersión del editor
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cirp.2024.04.056Publicado en
CIRP Annals Editor
ElsevierPalabras clave
SafetySustainable machining
productivity
Resumen
A novel aerosol evaluation cell was employed to measure particle number and mass concentration, with a size distribution from nano to micro scale. Different cooling/lubrication and airflow extraction ... [+]
A novel aerosol evaluation cell was employed to measure particle number and mass concentration, with a size distribution from nano to micro scale. Different cooling/lubrication and airflow extraction scenarios were tested on a CFRP/Ti6Al4V case study, and the particle concentrations were measured to evaluate their effect on productivity and cost per hole, if current occupational exposure limits are respected. Aspects to achieve sustainable machining like tool life, consumption of coolant and energy, and standby time required to safely open the machine-tool doors were considered. LCO2 delivered the best productivity and cost results as it improved the tool life by 40 % compared to MQL, while eliminating the need for standby time to evacuate particles. [-]
Financiador
Gobierno de EspañaPrograma
SMART EurekaNúmero
INNO-20182049URI de la ayuda
Sin informaciónProyecto
Mecanizado asistido por fluidos criogénicos (CRYOMACH)Colecciones
- Artículos - Ingeniería [684]
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