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Tool wear

About: Tool wear is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10580 publications have been published within this topic receiving 187761 citations. The topic is also known as: wear on cutting tools.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the cutting edge rounding (CER) was introduced as a measure of sharpness/bluntness of uncoated carbide tools during drilling CFRP composite laminates.
Abstract: An evenly and smoothly distributed abrasion wear, observed along the entire cutting edge of an uncoated carbide drill bit in drilling CFRPs, is due to the highly abrasive nature of the carbon fibres. A very few researchers have only quoted this wear mode as being responsible for giving rise to the rounding of the cutting edge, or its bluntness. However, this wear feature has seldom been investigated, unlike the conventional flank wear in practice. This paper offers a new approach in unveiling and introducing the cutting edge rounding (CER) – a latent wear characteristic as a measure of sharpness/bluntness – of uncoated cemented carbide tools during drilling CFRP composite laminates. Four different types of drills (conventional and specialised) were tested to assess the applicability and relevance of this new wear feature. Mechanical loads (drilling thrust and torque) were recorded, and the hole entry and exit delamination were quantified. For the utilised tools, the accruing magnitude of CER was also recorded, in parallel with studying their conventional flank wear. Very appreciable correlations between the CER and the drilling loads, and also the quantitative delamination results are observed. Results reveal that this new wear type develops almost similarly for the selected tools and is practically independent of their respective conventional flank wear patterns. Moreover, a distinct, non-zero magnitude of the CER for a very fresh tool state may provide researchers with some lucid information in further studying the results during wear tests, more emphatically. The CER correlations with quantitative delamination results are noticed quite comparable to those of the conventional flank wear via statistical linear regression analyses.

414 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focused on the tool wear characteristics in the machining of nickel-based superalloys, and the state of the art in the fields of failure mechanism, monitoring and prediction, and control of tool wear are reviewed.
Abstract: Nickel-based superalloy is widely employed in aircraft engines and the hot end components of various types of gas turbines with its high strength, strong corrosion resistance and excellent thermal fatigue properties and thermal stability. However, nickel-based superalloy is one of the extremely difficult-to-cut materials. During the machining process, the interaction between the tool and the workpiece causes the severe plastic deformation in the local area of workpiece, and the intense friction at the tool–workpiece interface. The resulting cutting heat coupled with the serious work hardening leads to a series of flaws, such as excessive tool wear, frequent tool change, short tool life, low productivity, and large amount of power consumption etc., in which the excessive tool wear has become one of the main bottlenecks that constraints the machinability of nickel-based superalloys and its wide range of applications. In this article, attention is mainly focused on the tool wear characteristics in the machining of nickel-based superalloys, and the state of the art in the fields of failure mechanism, monitoring and prediction, and control of tool wear are reviewed. The survey of existing works has revealed several gaps in the aspects of tool self-organizing process based on the non-equilibrium thermodynamics, tool wear considering the tool nose radius, thermal diffusion layer in coated tools, tool life prediction based on the thermal–mechanical coupling, and industrial application of tool wear online monitoring devices. The review aims at providing an insight into the tool wear characteristics in the machining of nickel-based superalloys and shows the great potential for further investigations and innovation in the field of tool wear.

409 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, minimum quantity lubrication (MQL) was provided with a spray of air and vegetable oil to reduce the cutting zone temperature enabling favorable chip formation and chip-tool interaction.

402 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared 138 publications dealing with on-line and indirect tool wear monitoring in turning by means of artificial neural networks and compared the methods applied in these publications as well as the methodologies used to select certain methods, to carry out simulation experiments, to evaluate and to present results.

397 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of cutting fluids on tool wear and surface roughness during turning of AISI 304 with carbide tool has been investigated and the results indicated that in general, coconut oil performed better than the other two cutting fluids in reducing the tool wear.

388 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023331
2022665
2021800
2020751
2019727
2018754