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Naotake Mohri

Bio: Naotake Mohri is an academic researcher from Toyota Technological Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electrical discharge machining & Machining. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 108 publications receiving 1640 citations.


Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, a surface modification method by electrical discharge machining with a green compact electrode has been studied to make a thick TiC or WC layer, where the powder is suspended in working oil like kerosene and the use of a thin electrode and a rotating disk electrode are expected to keep powder concentration high in the gap between a workpiece and an electrode and to accrete powder material on the workpiece.
Abstract: A surface modification method by electrical discharge machining (EDM) with a green compact electrode has been studied to make thick TiC or WC layer. Titanium alloy powder or tungsten powder is supplied from the green compact electrode and adheres on a workpiece by the heat caused by discharge. To avoid the production process of the green compact electrode, a surface modification method by EDM with powder suspended in working fluid is proposed in this paper. After considering flow of working fluid in EDM process, the use of a thin electrode and a rotating disk electrode are expected to keep powder concentration high in the gap between a workpiece and an electrode and to accrete powder material on the workpiece. The accretion machining is tried under various electrical conditions. Titanium powder is suspended in working oil like kerosene. TiC layer grows a thickness of 150 μm with a hardness of 1600 Hv on carbon steel with an electrode of 1 mm in diameter. When a disk placed near a plate rotates in viscous fluid, the disk drags the fluid into the gap between the disk and the plate. Therefore, the powder concentration in the gap between a workpiece and a rotational disk electrode can be kept high. A wider area of the accretion can be obtained by using the rotational electrode with a gear shape.

201 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a metal plate or metal mesh is arranged on the surface of a ceramic insulator as an assisting electrode to keep electrical conductivity on the work piece during the machining.

159 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a synthetic consideration of electrode wear phenomena in electrical discharge machining is presented, where the authors deal with a synthetic approach to evaluate the wear rate of an electrode in the stationary state of machining, taking account of turbostratic carbon on the electrode.

143 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new method of surface modification by electrical discharge machining using composite structured electrode surface modifications on work pieces of carbon steel or aluminum were carried out in hydrocarbon oil using composite electrodes Composite electrode consists of green compact products or sintered products Copper, aluminum, tungsten carbide and titanium were used for the material of the electrode, it was revealed that there existed the electrode material in the work surface layer and the characteristics of the surface of raw material remarkably changed

139 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a new process of finish machining on free-form surface is proposed, which consists of cutting an electrode and a work by a machining center, removing cusps of the electrode and the work by EDM and finish EDM with powder suspended working fluid.

123 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Electrical discharge machining (EDM) has been continuously evolving from a mere tool and die making process to a micro-scale application machining alternative attracting a significant amount of research interests as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Electrical discharge machining (EDM) is a well-established machining option for manufacturing geometrically complex or hard material parts that are extremely difficult-to-machine by conventional machining processes. The non-contact machining technique has been continuously evolving from a mere tool and die making process to a micro-scale application machining alternative attracting a significant amount of research interests. In recent years, EDM researchers have explored a number of ways to improve the sparking efficiency including some unique experimental concepts that depart from the EDM traditional sparking phenomenon. Despite a range of different approaches, this new research shares the same objectives of achieving more efficient metal removal coupled with a reduction in tool wear and improved surface quality. This paper reviews the research work carried out from the inception to the development of die-sinking EDM within the past decade. It reports on the EDM research relating to improving performance measures, optimising the process variables, monitoring and control the sparking process, simplifying the electrode design and manufacture. A range of EDM applications are highlighted together with the development of hybrid machining processes. The final part of the paper discusses these developments and outlines the trends for future EDM research.

1,421 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the research trends in electrical discharge machining on ultrasonic vibration, dry EDM machining with powder additives, EDM in water and modeling technique in predicting EDM performances.
Abstract: Electrical discharge machining (EDM) is one of the earliest non-traditional machining processes. EDM process is based on thermoelectric energy between the work piece and an electrode. A pulse discharge occurs in a small gap between the work piece and the electrode and removes the unwanted material from the parent metal through melting and vaporising. The electrode and the work piece must have electrical conductivity in order to generate the spark. There are various types of products which can be produced using EDM such as dies and moulds. Parts of aerospace, automotive industry and surgical components can be finished by EDM. This paper reviews the research trends in EDM on ultrasonic vibration, dry EDM machining, EDM with powder additives, EDM in water and modeling technique in predicting EDM performances.

785 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show the prospects of electrical discharge machining (EDM) technology by interrelating recent achievements in fundamental studies on EDM with newly developed advanced application technologies.

782 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a roadmap of development in the thermal and fabrication aspects of microchannels as applied in microelectronics and other high heat-flux cooling applications.
Abstract: This paper provides a roadmap of development in the thermal and fabrication aspects of microchannels as applied in microelectronics and other high heat-flux cooling applications. Microchannels are defined as flow passages that have hydraulic diameters in the range of 10 to 200 micrometers. The impetus for microchannel research was provided by the pioneering work of Tuckerman and Pease [1] at Stanford University in the early eighties. Since that time, this technology has received considerable attention in microelectronics and other major application areas, such as fuel cell systems and advanced heat sink designs. After reviewing the advancement in heat transfer technology from a historical perspective, the advantages of using microchannels in high heat flux cooling applications is discussed, and research done on various aspects of microchannel heat exchanger performance is reviewed. Single-phase performance for liquids is still expected to be describable by conventional equations; however, the gas flow may...

672 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors reviewed the vast array of research work carried out from the spin-off from the EDM process to the development of the WEDM, and highlighted the adaptive monitoring and control of the process investigating the feasibility of different control strategies of obtaining the optimal machining conditions.
Abstract: Wire electrical discharge machining (WEDM) is a specialised thermal machining process capable of accurately machining parts with varying hardness or complex shapes, which have sharp edges that are very difficult to be machined by the main stream machining processes. This practical technology of the WEDM process is based on the conventional EDM sparking phenomenon utilising the widely accepted non-contact technique of material removal. Since the introduction of the process, WEDM has evolved from a simple means of making tools and dies to the best alternative of producing micro-scale parts with the highest degree of dimensional accuracy and surface finish quality. Over the years, the WEDM process has remained as a competitive and economical machining option fulfilling the demanding machining requirements imposed by the short product development cycles and the growing cost pressures. However, the risk of wire breakage and bending has undermined the full potential of the process drastically reducing the efficiency and accuracy of the WEDM operation. A significant amount of research has explored the different methodologies of achieving the ultimate WEDM goals of optimising the numerous process parameters analytically with the total elimination of the wire breakages thereby also improving the overall machining reliability. This paper reviews the vast array of research work carried out from the spin-off from the EDM process to the development of the WEDM. It reports on the WEDM research involving the optimisation of the process parameters surveying the influence of the various factors affecting the machining performance and productivity. The paper also highlights the adaptive monitoring and control of the process investigating the feasibility of the different control strategies of obtaining the optimal machining conditions. A wide range of WEDM industrial applications are reported together with the development of the hybrid machining processes. The final part of the paper discusses these developments and outlines the possible trends for future WEDM research.

658 citations