Determining tool/chip temperatures from thermography measurements in metal cutting

•Calculated tool/chip temperatures up to 75% greater than measurements in tool side.•Calculation of tool/chip temperatures reliable to discern the influence of material.•Tool/chip temperatures are reliable to analyse the influence of cutting conditions.•Tool/chip temperatures in ferrite-pearlite gra...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied thermal engineering 2018-12, Vol.145, p.305-314
Hauptverfasser: Saez-de-Buruaga, M., Soler, D., Aristimuño, P.X., Esnaola, J.A., Arrazola, P.J.
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container_end_page 314
container_issue
container_start_page 305
container_title Applied thermal engineering
container_volume 145
creator Saez-de-Buruaga, M.
Soler, D.
Aristimuño, P.X.
Esnaola, J.A.
Arrazola, P.J.
description •Calculated tool/chip temperatures up to 75% greater than measurements in tool side.•Calculation of tool/chip temperatures reliable to discern the influence of material.•Tool/chip temperatures are reliable to analyse the influence of cutting conditions.•Tool/chip temperatures in ferrite-pearlite grades are linked to perlite content.•Deviation less than 12% between FEM and calculated tool/chip temperatures. Temperature measurement in metal cutting is of central importance as tool wear and surface integrity have been demonstrated to be temperature dependent. In this context, infrared thermography is presented as a reliable technique to determine tool temperatures and thermal fields at near real-time. However, a constraint of this technique is that temperatures are measured on the tool side faces normal to the cutting edge but offset from the tool/chip contact. In the present research, tool/chip contact temperatures were calculated from the tool side based on analytical theories of heating and the principles of heat generation in cutting processes. The required inputs were commonly measurable variables (cutting and feed forces, chip thickness and tool/chip contact length). The proposed approach was combined with a new calibration method in which a calibration curve that directly relates real and radiated temperatures is obtained, instead of measuring the emissivity of the radiating surface. As a case study, the research was conducted on a set of four ferrite-pearlite steels (16MnCr5, 27MnCr, C45 and C60). The results demonstrated the effectiveness of the method to establish the real influence of the cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed) and to distinguish the effect that different work material microstructures have in tool/chip temperature. Furthermore, the results showed a high degree of accuracy and less than 12% deviation from the trends when compared with 2D cutting simulations.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2018.09.051
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Temperature measurement in metal cutting is of central importance as tool wear and surface integrity have been demonstrated to be temperature dependent. In this context, infrared thermography is presented as a reliable technique to determine tool temperatures and thermal fields at near real-time. However, a constraint of this technique is that temperatures are measured on the tool side faces normal to the cutting edge but offset from the tool/chip contact. In the present research, tool/chip contact temperatures were calculated from the tool side based on analytical theories of heating and the principles of heat generation in cutting processes. The required inputs were commonly measurable variables (cutting and feed forces, chip thickness and tool/chip contact length). The proposed approach was combined with a new calibration method in which a calibration curve that directly relates real and radiated temperatures is obtained, instead of measuring the emissivity of the radiating surface. As a case study, the research was conducted on a set of four ferrite-pearlite steels (16MnCr5, 27MnCr, C45 and C60). The results demonstrated the effectiveness of the method to establish the real influence of the cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed) and to distinguish the effect that different work material microstructures have in tool/chip temperature. 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Temperature measurement in metal cutting is of central importance as tool wear and surface integrity have been demonstrated to be temperature dependent. In this context, infrared thermography is presented as a reliable technique to determine tool temperatures and thermal fields at near real-time. However, a constraint of this technique is that temperatures are measured on the tool side faces normal to the cutting edge but offset from the tool/chip contact. In the present research, tool/chip contact temperatures were calculated from the tool side based on analytical theories of heating and the principles of heat generation in cutting processes. The required inputs were commonly measurable variables (cutting and feed forces, chip thickness and tool/chip contact length). The proposed approach was combined with a new calibration method in which a calibration curve that directly relates real and radiated temperatures is obtained, instead of measuring the emissivity of the radiating surface. As a case study, the research was conducted on a set of four ferrite-pearlite steels (16MnCr5, 27MnCr, C45 and C60). The results demonstrated the effectiveness of the method to establish the real influence of the cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed) and to distinguish the effect that different work material microstructures have in tool/chip temperature. 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Temperature measurement in metal cutting is of central importance as tool wear and surface integrity have been demonstrated to be temperature dependent. In this context, infrared thermography is presented as a reliable technique to determine tool temperatures and thermal fields at near real-time. However, a constraint of this technique is that temperatures are measured on the tool side faces normal to the cutting edge but offset from the tool/chip contact. In the present research, tool/chip contact temperatures were calculated from the tool side based on analytical theories of heating and the principles of heat generation in cutting processes. The required inputs were commonly measurable variables (cutting and feed forces, chip thickness and tool/chip contact length). The proposed approach was combined with a new calibration method in which a calibration curve that directly relates real and radiated temperatures is obtained, instead of measuring the emissivity of the radiating surface. As a case study, the research was conducted on a set of four ferrite-pearlite steels (16MnCr5, 27MnCr, C45 and C60). The results demonstrated the effectiveness of the method to establish the real influence of the cutting conditions (cutting speed and feed) and to distinguish the effect that different work material microstructures have in tool/chip temperature. Furthermore, the results showed a high degree of accuracy and less than 12% deviation from the trends when compared with 2D cutting simulations.</abstract><cop>Oxford</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><doi>10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2018.09.051</doi><tpages>10</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Buckminsterfullerene
Calibration
Cutting speed
Cutting wear
Fullerenes
Heat generation
Infrared thermography
Metal cutting
Metals
Orthogonal cutting
Pearlite
Simulation
Temperature
Temperature dependence
Temperature measurement
Thermography
Tool wear
title Determining tool/chip temperatures from thermography measurements in metal cutting
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