ABSTRACT
Industries have been pursuing a competent machining strategy that fulfills the necessity of sustainability without deteriorating tool wear or final product quality of components made from difficult-to-cut material Titanium 64. This article attempts a combination ultrasonic vibration with vegetable oil-based cutting fluid (VCF), to increases the tool life and machinability of Titanium 64. In-house developed Ultrasonic-assisted turning (UAT) setup for vibration, and emulsion of 10% Canola oil for cooling, are used. The machinability in respect of cutting and feed force, tool-chip contact length, and flank and crater wear, are examined. As a result, the UAT under VCF offers a reduction in tool-chip contact length by 12–45%, cutting force by 10–25%, and feed force by 20–40%. Moreover, ultrasonic-assisted turning using vegetable oil-based cutting fluid also decreases the adhesion and abrasion wear from the rake face, which is obvious in the conventional turning process of Titanium 64.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Correction Statement
This article has been corrected with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.