Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5017561 Journal of Materials Processing Technology 2018 28 Pages PDF
Abstract
In milling of hard-to-cut materials such as Titanium and Ni-based superalloy, tool wear increases rapidly and the tool life can be as short as a few minutes. Moreover, tool wear will influence the workpiece geometrical accuracy and surface quality. Aiming at improving the tool life in multi-axis milling of freeform workpieces made of Ni-based superalloy with a ball-end cutter, this paper introduces a new multi-axis milling strategy for freeform surfaces based on the idea of shifting the active cutting edge on the cutter. The proposed machining strategy tries to use different cutting edges on the cutter to cut the material for different portions of the workpiece surface as each edge element can only be used in the cutting for a short time. The relationships between the tool orientation, active cutting edge and cutter-workpiece engagement are established, and the tool wear rate is approximated in predicting the tool life for each edge element in the milling process. Both the cutter edge and cutter contact curve are divided into several segments according to the maximum cutting length of each cutter edge segment. Tool orientation is then planned based on the shifted active cutting edge. Cutting experiments are performed and their results show that a large improvement of tool life can be achieved by the proposed machining strategy.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
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