Methodology to determine friction in orthogonal cutting with application to machining titanium and nickel based alloys

Durul Ulutan, Tuǧrul Özel

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Friction plays a very important role in machining titanium and nickel alloys. It is the source for the high amount of heat generation, and as a result, the excessive tool wear during machining these materials. The worn tool is known to create lower surface qualities with tensile surface residual stresses and machine-induced hardening at the surface, as well as high surface roughness. It is essential to create a method to determine how and to what extent the friction is built up on the tool. This study facilitates a determination methodology to estimate the friction coefficients between the tool and the chip on the rake face, as well as the tool and the workpiece on the flank face of the tool. The results are validated with experimental results from the titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V and the nickel alloy IN-100.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Title of host publicationASME 2012 International Manufacturing Science and Engineering Conference Collocated with the 40th North American Manufacturing Research Conf. and in Participation with the Int. Conf., MSEC 2012
Pages327-334
Number of pages8
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012
EventASME 2012 International Manufacturing Science and Engineering Conference, MSEC 2012 Collocated with the 40th North American Manufacturing Research Conference and in Participation with the International Conference - Notre Dame, IN, United States
Duration: Jun 4 2012Jun 8 2012

Publication series

NameASME 2012 International Manufacturing Science and Engineering Conference Collocated with the 40th North American Manufacturing Research Conference and in Participation with the Int. Conf., MSEC 2012

Other

OtherASME 2012 International Manufacturing Science and Engineering Conference, MSEC 2012 Collocated with the 40th North American Manufacturing Research Conference and in Participation with the International Conference
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityNotre Dame, IN
Period6/4/126/8/12

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering

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