Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7176394 | Journal of Materials Processing Technology | 2018 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
In milling applications thermal and mechanical loadings are affecting the damage behavior of milling inserts. There are several open questions regarding the influence of loading and tool temperature on inelastic deformations and damage mechanisms. The aim of the current work is to simulate industrial milling processes with the finite element method and generate knowledge about the acting damage mechanisms. The validation of the results is made by two recently reported experimental milling setups. The focus of the simulations is set on investigations of the evolution of tensile residual stresses orientated parallel to the cutting edge of a milling insert. These tensile residual stresses foster the formation and growth of so-called comb cracks growing in planes perpendicular to the cutting edge which are detrimental to the performance of the tool. The insert is made of WC-Co hard metal with 8â¯wt.% Co-binder and an average WC grain size of 1â¯Î¼m. It is coated with a 7â¯Î¼m thick TiAlN layer acting as a thermal shield. The workpiece material is 42CrMo4, described by a Johnson-Cook constitutive material model. The milling process is modeled with a 2D Arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian (ALE) approach. Results of the 2D simulations are used to generate the temperature and contact load imposed on a 3D solid-model of the milling insert that is in turn used to predict the evolution of stress and temperature over 50 milling cycles. The simulations reproduce a shift of residual stresses toward tension in the milling insert at the same location as observed in experiments from which one failed due to comb cracks and one due to wear.
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Authors
Andreas W. Nemetz, Werner Daves, Thomas Klünsner, Werner Ecker, Tamara Teppernegg, Christoph Czettl, Ivan KrajinoviÄ,