Authors: Romain Piquard Sébastien Thibaud Alain D’Acunto Michaël Fontaine Daniel Dudzinski
Publish Date: 2016/06/21
Volume: 88, Issue: 9-12, Pages: 3429-3436
Abstract
In micromilling cutting forces are driven by many parameters including feed per tooth depth of cut rake angle and machined material Because of size effects issues inherent in the micromilling process such as chatter edge radius or tool deflection influence the cutting forces making it difficult to understand the process To overcome this problem the best solution is to perform experiments independently on each parameter With orthogonal and oblique microcutting experiments chip formation is investigated with fewer parameters This study aimed to model microcutting using the results obtained from orthogonal and oblique microcutting experiments based on tube turning ignoring dynamic considerations It was experimentally observed that a jump in cutting forces occurs when the uncut chip thickness decreases described as a transient regime between ploughing and shearing dominant regimes The ploughing regime for low uncut chip thicknesses is characterised by a normal force greater than the cutting force At higher uncut chip thicknesses the cutting force is dominant A phenomenological model was developed to take into account the divergence in cutting forces at low uncut chip thicknesses The model was divided into two terms that model respectively ploughing and shearing regimes with a continuous transient regime The model reproduced the behaviour quite well and could be enriched with more parameters
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