An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of Dressing and Grinding Parameters on Sustainable Grinding of Inconel 738 Used for Automated Manufacturing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Grinding of Inconel 738 Using Single-Edge Diamond Dresser
3.2. Grinding of Inconel 738 Using Four-Edge Diamond Dresser
4. Conclusions
- The grinding efficiency in the MQL technique is due to the combined effects of lubrication and the appropriateness of the wheel and workpiece combinations, which are comparable to conventional wet grinding.
- The grinding wheel surface topography has an important influence on the grinding process and it can be managed by the appropriate selection of depth of dressing and dressing speed. One of the significant results obtained in the present study is that soft dressing by decreasing the dressing material removal rate (reducing dressing depth and feed rate) will not always reduce the workpiece surface roughness. A very fine dressing process with a low material removal rate during dressing generate more grains flattening and reduce the number of active grains on the wheel surface, which increases chip loading on the wheel surface and results in more friction, sliding and plowing of grains on the workpiece surface during the grinding process.
- Chip loading on the grinding wheel surface is one of the most critical parameters in the grinding process. Changes in dressing depth and feed rate, workpiece feed rate, and the coolant–lubricant environment can affect the amount of wheel surface loading. Due to low cutting fluid flow in the MQL technique, chip loading is significant. By rough dressing, due to the increase in depth and feed rate of the dresser, the space between the grains increases and the deposition decreases.
- It is possible to generate surface roughness close to single-edge dressers by increasing the dressing feed rate in a four-edge dresser application while preparing the GW surface before grinding. In this case, increasing the dressing feed rate reduces dressing time and increases production capability. In addition, the lifetime of four-edge dressers is much longer than single-edge dressers.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
dressing feed rate (mm/min) | |
dressing depth (µm) | |
depth of grinding (µm) | |
table speed (m/min) | |
grinding wheel speed (m/s) | |
dressing pitch (mm) | |
theoretical roughness (mm) | |
Rz | the average maximum peak to valley of five consecutive sampling lengths within the measuring length (µm) |
dresser radius (mm) | |
grinding wheel diameter (mm) | |
GW | the grinding wheel |
MQL | the minimum quantity lubrication |
SEM | the scanning electron microscope |
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Investigator | Year | Research Condition | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Pande et al. [14] | 1979 | Effects of dressing parameters on GW performance | Achieve optimal mode for dressing feed and depth |
Li et al. [15] | 2006 | Wear of diamond GWs in grinding of silicon nitrides | The importance of sharpening in diamonds as well as providing the optimal mode of dressing depth for silicon nitride |
Linke et al. [16] | 2010 | Temperature and wear mechanism in dressing of vitrified bonded GWs | Diamond dressers’ wear mechanism and factors and their effect on ground surface roughness |
Daneshi et al. [17] | 2014 | Effects of dressing parameters on internal grinding | Investigation of the effect of GW diameter and dressing method on roughness and geometrical form and quality of holes in the grinding process |
Klocke et al. [18] | 2008 | Mechanisms in the generation of GW topography by dressing | Investigating of the effect of dressing and GW structure on the formation of workpiece surface defects and roughness |
Deng et al. [19] | 2019 | A review on dressing strategies of super abrasive GWs | Offering a variety of different methods of GW dressing |
Hadad et al. [20] | 2016 | Investigation of the effects of dressing and wheel topography on grinding process using different coolant–lubricant conditions | Effect of single point diamond dressing parameters on the roughness of the workpiece and reduction in cutting fluid consumption |
Moreno et al. [21] | 2020 | Friction improvement by GW texturing using dressing process | Produce different GW surface topography in a controlled dressing process to reduce friction coefficient |
Zhou et al. [22] | 2019 | Dressing technology of arc diamond wheel by roll abrading in aspheric parallel grinding | Improve dressing and grinding performance of arc diamond wheels |
Investigator | Year | Research Condition | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Hoffmeister et al. [23] | 1998 | 100Cr6 (60HRC) and application of liquid nitrogen with MQL with ester oil and corundum GW with vitrified bond | Reduction of forces, reduction in roughness, reduction in GW wear |
Baheti et al. [24] | 1998 | AISI 52100 (60HRC) using ester oil and corundum GW with vitrified bond | Reduce specific power and energy, reduce GW wear, increase roughness |
Tönshoff et al. [25] | 1994 | 16MnCr5 (58HRC) and application of ester oil and corundum GW with vitrified bond and comparison with conventional wet grinding with mineral oil | Reduction of grinding forces, an increase in roughness |
Brockhoff et al. [26] | 1998 | 16MnCr5 (58HRC) and application of ester oil and corundum GW with vitrified bond | Increased roughness and grinding forces, applicability in Qw < 5 mm3/mm·s |
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Hafenbraedl et al. [28] | 2000 | AISI 52100 (60HRC) and application of ester oil and internal cylindrical grinding and corundum GW with vitrified bond | Reduce specific power and energy, reduce GW wear, increase roughness |
Silva et al. [29] | 2005 | ABNT4340 (60HRC) and application of vegetable oil and corundum GW with vitrified bond and CBN GW | Reduction of tensile residual stress on the surface, reduction in force and roughness |
Tawakoli et al. [21] | 2010 | 100Cr6 and SG corundum GWs with vitrified and resin bond | Reduction of roughness, grinding forces, increase in efficiency, effective lubrication by choosing the right type of coolant–lubricant GW |
Shen et al. [29] | 2008 | Dura-Bar 100-70-02 ductile iron (50HRC) and corundum GW with vitrified bond and CBN GW with vitrified bond and application of Nano-fluids in grinding | Reduction of forces and roughness and GW wear, increase in lubrication property |
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Mao et al. [32] | 2014 | Use vegetable oils (soy, palm, and canola), liquid paraffin | Nanofluid with palm oil and molybdenum disulfide particles has the best lubrication properties, the best choice for proper heat transfer and lubrication performance |
Rabiei et al. [33] | 2014 | Use of mild steels (CK45, S305) and hard steels (HSS, 100Cr6), Al2O3 GW grinders, MQL, Dry, Wet conditions, | MQL in both types of steel causes a reduction in grinding force and coefficient of friction, better surface quality in hard steels and poor surface quality in soft steels |
Setti et al. [34] | 2015 | Ti-6Al-4V, GC60K5V GW, use of nanofluids (water with Al2O3 nanoparticles and water with CuO nanoparticles) with different concentrations for MQL | Reduction of friction, tangential force, grinding zone temperature, formation of c-shaped chips |
Hadad et al. [35] | 2020 | A novel approach to improve environmentally friendly machining processes using ultrasonic nozzle–minimum quantity lubrication system | Improve droplet size and distribution and spray performance, improve surface quality |
Type of Grinding Process | Flat Grinding |
---|---|
Grinding wheel | Al2O3 (WA60K9V), Vitrified band, outer diameter: 450 mm |
Surface grinding machine | Surface grinding machine MST-300-1000 |
GW rotational speed | 2000 RPM |
GW speed (vc) | vc = 47 m/s |
Table feed rate (vft) | vft = 4.5–15 m/min |
Grinding depth of cut (ae) | ae = 30 µm |
Grinding environment | Cutting fluid, MQL (air-oil mixture) |
Fluid used in grinding with cutting fluid and dressing operation | Water-soluble oil with a concentration of 5% |
Cutting fluid flow rate in wet grinding | 4 L/min |
Oil flow rate in MQL grinding | 200 mL/h |
Air pressure in MQL grinding | 5 bar |
MQL oil | Vegetable oil |
MQL oil viscosity (at 20 °C) | 84 cP |
MQL nozzle horizontal distance to GW | 80 mm |
Workpiece | Inconel 738 (16 × 40 × 200 mm) |
Dressing tool | Single-edge, four-edge diamond tools |
Dressing depth (ad) | ad = 2, 5, 10, 20 µm |
Dressing feed rate (vd) | vd = 50, 85, 213, 420, 600 mm/min |
Dresser attack angle (αd) | αd = 10° |
Number of dressing passes | Ndt = 3 |
Density (kg/m3) | Young’s Modulus (GPa) | Poisson’s Ratio | Thermal Conductivity (W/(m K)) | Thermal Expansion Coefficient (K−1) | Specific Heat (J/(kg K)) | Shear Modulus (GPa) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8220 | 208 | 0.3 | 11.4 | 1.3 × 10−5 | 203 | 67.8 |
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Hadad, M.; Attarsharghi, S.; Makarian, J.; Mahdianikhotbesara, A. An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of Dressing and Grinding Parameters on Sustainable Grinding of Inconel 738 Used for Automated Manufacturing. Processes 2023, 11, 2876. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11102876
Hadad M, Attarsharghi S, Makarian J, Mahdianikhotbesara A. An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of Dressing and Grinding Parameters on Sustainable Grinding of Inconel 738 Used for Automated Manufacturing. Processes. 2023; 11(10):2876. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11102876
Chicago/Turabian StyleHadad, Mohammadjafar, Samareh Attarsharghi, Javad Makarian, and Ali Mahdianikhotbesara. 2023. "An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of Dressing and Grinding Parameters on Sustainable Grinding of Inconel 738 Used for Automated Manufacturing" Processes 11, no. 10: 2876. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11102876
APA StyleHadad, M., Attarsharghi, S., Makarian, J., & Mahdianikhotbesara, A. (2023). An Experimental Investigation of the Effects of Dressing and Grinding Parameters on Sustainable Grinding of Inconel 738 Used for Automated Manufacturing. Processes, 11(10), 2876. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11102876