Numerical and Experimental Investigations of the Machinability of Ti6AI4V Energy Efficiency and Sustainable Cooling/ Lubrication Strategies

University dissertation from Stockholm : KTH Royal Institute of Technology

Abstract: Titanium alloys are widely utilized in the aerospace, biomedical,marine, petro-chemical and other demanding industries due to theirdurability, high fatigue resistance and ability to sustain elevateoperating temperature. As titanium alloys are difficult to machine, dueto which machining of these alloys ends up with higher environmentalburden. The industry is now embracing the sustainable philosophy inorder to reduce their carbon footprint. This means that the bestsustainable practices have to be used in machining of titanium alloys aswell as in an effort to reduce the carbon footprint and greenhouse gas(GHG) emissions.In this thesis, a better understanding towards the feasibility of shiftingfrom conventional (dry and flood) cooling techniques to the vegetableoil based minimum quantity cooling lubrication (MQCL) wasestablished. Machining performance of MQCL cooling strategies wasencouraging as in most cases the tool life was found close to floodstrategy or sometimes even better. The study revealed that theinfluence of the MQCL (Internal) application method on overallmachining performance was more evident at higher cutting speeds. Inaddition to the experimental machinability investigations, FiniteElement Modeling (FEM) and Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD)Modeling was also employed to prediction of energy consumed inmachining and cutting temperature distribution on the cutting tool. Allnumerical results were found in close agreement to the experimentaldata. The contribution of the thesis should be of interest to those whowork in the areas of sustainable machining.

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