Abstract This paper presents a study of the influence of cutting conditions on the finished surfa... more Abstract This paper presents a study of the influence of cutting conditions on the finished surface obtained after an hard turning process, in particular a case study is presented where AISI 52100 bearing steel is machined under different cutting conditions. An analysis ...
ABSTRACT Friction, and consequently heat generation in the cutting zone, significantly affects th... more ABSTRACT Friction, and consequently heat generation in the cutting zone, significantly affects the tool life, surface integrity and dimensional accuracy, apart from other machining results. Application of a coolant in a cutting process can increase tool life and dimensional accuracy, decrease heat generation, and consequently cutting temperatures, reduce surface roughness and the amount of energy consumed in cutting process, and thus improve the productivity. Furthermore, coolant application also affects the surface microstructural alterations (i.e., white and dark layers) due to a machining operation, which have a significant influence on product performance and life. This paper presents the results of an experimental investigation to determine the effects of cryogenic coolant application on tool wear, cutting forces and machined surface alterations during orthogonal machining of hardened AISI 52100 bearing steel (54±1 HRC). Experiments were performed for dry and cryogenic cutting conditions using chamfered PCBN tool inserts at varying cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed rate). For cryogenic cutting conditions the fluid was applied in the form of a liquid nitrogen jet directed on the three shear cutting zones. Cutting forces, tool wear, cutting temperatures, surface hardness modifications and microstructure alterations were studied in order to evaluate the effects of extreme in-process cooling. The results indicate that cryogenic cooling has the potential to be used for surface integrity enhancement for improved product life and more sustainable functional performance.
ABSTRACT FEM implicit formulation shows specific limitations in processes such as cutting, where ... more ABSTRACT FEM implicit formulation shows specific limitations in processes such as cutting, where large deformation results in a heavy mesh distortion. Powerful rezoning-remeshing algorithms strongly reduce the effects of such a limitation but the computational times are significantly increased and additional errors are introduced. Nodal Integration is a recently introduced technique that allows finite element method to provide more reliable results when mesh becomes distorted in traditional FEMs. Furthermore, volumetric locking phenomenon seems to be avoided by using this integration technique instead of other methods, such as the coupled formulations. In this paper, a comparison between a “classical” FEM simulation and the Nodal Integration one is carried out taking into account a simple orthogonal cutting process.
Abstract This paper presents a study of the influence of cutting conditions on the finished surfa... more Abstract This paper presents a study of the influence of cutting conditions on the finished surface obtained after an hard turning process, in particular a case study is presented where AISI 52100 bearing steel is machined under different cutting conditions. An analysis ...
ABSTRACT Friction, and consequently heat generation in the cutting zone, significantly affects th... more ABSTRACT Friction, and consequently heat generation in the cutting zone, significantly affects the tool life, surface integrity and dimensional accuracy, apart from other machining results. Application of a coolant in a cutting process can increase tool life and dimensional accuracy, decrease heat generation, and consequently cutting temperatures, reduce surface roughness and the amount of energy consumed in cutting process, and thus improve the productivity. Furthermore, coolant application also affects the surface microstructural alterations (i.e., white and dark layers) due to a machining operation, which have a significant influence on product performance and life. This paper presents the results of an experimental investigation to determine the effects of cryogenic coolant application on tool wear, cutting forces and machined surface alterations during orthogonal machining of hardened AISI 52100 bearing steel (54±1 HRC). Experiments were performed for dry and cryogenic cutting conditions using chamfered PCBN tool inserts at varying cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed rate). For cryogenic cutting conditions the fluid was applied in the form of a liquid nitrogen jet directed on the three shear cutting zones. Cutting forces, tool wear, cutting temperatures, surface hardness modifications and microstructure alterations were studied in order to evaluate the effects of extreme in-process cooling. The results indicate that cryogenic cooling has the potential to be used for surface integrity enhancement for improved product life and more sustainable functional performance.
ABSTRACT FEM implicit formulation shows specific limitations in processes such as cutting, where ... more ABSTRACT FEM implicit formulation shows specific limitations in processes such as cutting, where large deformation results in a heavy mesh distortion. Powerful rezoning-remeshing algorithms strongly reduce the effects of such a limitation but the computational times are significantly increased and additional errors are introduced. Nodal Integration is a recently introduced technique that allows finite element method to provide more reliable results when mesh becomes distorted in traditional FEMs. Furthermore, volumetric locking phenomenon seems to be avoided by using this integration technique instead of other methods, such as the coupled formulations. In this paper, a comparison between a “classical” FEM simulation and the Nodal Integration one is carried out taking into account a simple orthogonal cutting process.
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Papers by S. Di Renzo