Regenerative reassembly phenomenon in the turning process machining the A1020 steel
Artículo de revista
2018-08-01
Contemporary Engineering Sciences
Bulgaria
The chattering in the machine tools is a phenomenon that causes instability in the
machining process, surface finish with high roughness, also produces excessive
and accelerated wear on the tool in the metal cutting processes, this phenomenon
consists of self-excited vibrations which are produced and maintained due to the
cutting forces, the purpose of this article is to analyze regenerative chatter and
predict the optimal points of operation in the turning process for 1020 carbon steel
by developing analytical methods for generating stability lobe diagrams. To
achieve this objective, the methods proposed by Altinas and Budak to stabilize the
self-excited vibrations in the turning process applied to the orthogonal cut were
studied in detail. These methods are widely accepted within the community of
researchers and specialists in the field, thanks to the excellent results obtained in
practice. Once the models studied were compressed, a computational algorithm
was developed with the help of the MATLAB® software that was able to generate
stability lobe diagrams for the turning operation in order to find the optimal points
of operation so that there was no chatter, thus improving the material removal rate
and increasing productivity
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Regenerative reassembly phenomenon in the turning process machining the A1020 steel.pdf
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Título: Regenerative reassembly phenomenon in the turning process machining the A1020 steel.pdf
Tamaño: 695.3Kb
PDFLEER EN FLIP