Study of the Influence of Cutting Edge on Micro Cutting of Hardened Steel Using FE and SPH Modeling.

41NiCrMo7 steel ALE CEL SPH modeling chip morphology cutting edge radius cutting force finite element modeling micromachining

Journal

Micromachines
ISSN: 2072-666X
Titre abrégé: Micromachines (Basel)
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101640903

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
07 Jul 2022
Historique:
received: 01 03 2022
revised: 03 06 2022
accepted: 28 06 2022
entrez: 27 7 2022
pubmed: 28 7 2022
medline: 28 7 2022
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Micromachining allows the production of micro-components with complex geometries in various materials. However, it presents several scientific issues due to scale reduction compared to conventional machining. These issues are called size effects. At this level, micromachining experiments raise technical difficulties and significant costs. In this context, numerical modeling is widely used in order to study these different size effects. This article presents four different numerical models of micro-cutting of hardened steel, a Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) model and three finite element (FE) models using three different formulations: Lagrangian, Arbitrary Eulerian-Lagrangian (ALE) and Coupled Eulerian-Lagrangian (CEL). The objective is to study the effect of tool edge radius on the micro-cutting process through the evolution of cutting forces, chip morphology and stress distribution in different areas and to compare the relevance of the different models. First, results obtained from two models using FE (Lagrangian) and SPH method were compared with experimental data obtained in previous work. It shows that the different numerical methods are relevant for studying geometrical size effects because cutting force and stress distribution correlate with experimental data. However, they present limits due to the calculation approaches. For a second time, this paper presents a comparison between the four different numerical models cited previously in order to choose which method of modeling can present the micro-cutting process.

Identifiants

pubmed: 35888896
pii: mi13071079
doi: 10.3390/mi13071079
pmc: PMC9317438
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Références

Micromachines (Basel). 2021 Aug 12;12(8):
pubmed: 34442574

Auteurs

Lobna Chaabani (L)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Romain Piquard (R)

LEM3 Laboratory (UMR CNRS 7239), T-PRIOM Department, Lorraine University, Arts & Métiers ParisTech, 57070 Metz, France.

Radouane Abnay (R)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Michaël Fontaine (M)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Alexandre Gilbin (A)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Philippe Picart (P)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Sébastien Thibaud (S)

Applied Mechanics Department, FEMTO-ST Institute (UMR CNRS 6174), Bourgogne Franche-Comté University (UFC/ENSMM), 25000 Besançon, France.

Alain D'Acunto (A)

LEM3 Laboratory (UMR CNRS 7239), T-PRIOM Department, Lorraine University, Arts & Métiers ParisTech, 57070 Metz, France.

Daniel Dudzinski (D)

LEM3 Laboratory (UMR CNRS 7239), T-PRIOM Department, Lorraine University, Arts & Métiers ParisTech, 57070 Metz, France.

Classifications MeSH