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Articles

Experimental study on impulse discharge machinability of concave micro-array using a micro-tip array electrode

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GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT

It is difficult for mechanical machining to fabricate concave micro-array due to size limit and micro-tool wear. Hence, electro discharge micro-machining is proposed to fabricate concave micro-array using micro-tip array electrode. The objective is to explore the batch micro-machinability of various metallic materials such as die steel, titanium alloy and cemented carbide. First, micro-grinding with diamond wheel micro-tip was performed to fabricate pyramid micro-tip array on electrode surface; then, impulse discharge removal derived from the electrode tips was employed to gradually machine the concave micro-array on metallic surfaces; finally, micro-machined shape and corresponding machining performances were investigated. It is shown that the micro-machining performances depend on material melting point, electric conductivity, and thermal conductivity. Low melting point and electric conductivity lead to good micro-machined shape with small relative wear rate. High electric conductivity and low melting point produce small surface roughness, large micro-removal rate and discharge energy efficiency. Low thermal conductivity leads to large aspect ratio and micro-removal rate. It is confirmed that die steel produces small surface roughness, large micro-removal rate and discharge energy efficiency, whereas titanium alloy produces large aspect ratio and small relative wear rate.

Funding

National Natural Science Foundation of China [61475046]; Guangdong Science and Technology Project [2016A040403043]; Guangdong Science Foundation of China [2015A030311015]; Guangdong Science and Technology Project[2017A010102003]; Guangzhou Science and Technology Project [201508030012]; Guangdong Science and Technology Project [2014B010104003].

Nomenclature

ap=

cutting depth of diamond wheel (µm)

B=

the width of diamond wheel (mm)

CH=

the hardness of workpiece material (HRC)

c(T)=

the specific heat capacity of workpiece material (J/kg · K)

D=

the diameter of diamond wheel (mm)

Et=

discharge energy (J)

G=

the electric conductivity of workpiece material (MS/m)

Ge=

discharge gap (µm)

H=

the total height of micro-cavity (µm)

hf=

feeding height (µm)

hv=

the overlapping height of micro-cavity (µm)

hw=

concave micro-array height (µm)

I=

discharge current (A)

L=

micro-cavity width (µm)

Lm=

the latent heat of workpiece material (kJ/mol)

N=

diamond wheel speed (r/min)

n=

the number of spark impulse of waveform trace

Q=

theoretical energy for metal melting (J)

q=

the energy distribution coefficient of anode (%)

Ra=

surface roughness of machined workpiece

rq=

aspect ratio of concave micro-array

rw=

relative wear rate (%)

T0=

initial temperature (K)

Tm=

the melting point of workpiece material (K)

t=

machining duration (s)

tL=

the sample length of waveform trace (s)

V=

the volume of micro-cavity (µm3)

vd=

micro-removal rate (mm3/min)

vf=

feeding speed of diamond wheel(mm/min)

WD=

the energy of single impulse discharge (J)

η=

discharge energy efficiency (%)

θ=

the form-truing angle of diamond wheel (°)

λ=

the thermal conductivity of workpiece material (W/mK)

ρ=

the density of workpiece material (g/cm3)

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