Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel

The marked increase in demand for miniaturized consumer products in a broad range of potential applications including medical, telecommunication, avionics, biotechnology and electronics is a result of advancements in miniaturization technologies. Consequently, engineering components are being drasti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Chee Keong
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
P20
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/6862
id ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-6862
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-68622013-01-07T20:11:54ZExperimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold SteelNg, Chee KeongMicro-/ nano-scale cuttingAluminum 7075P20SteelAluminum alloysCuttingMicromachiningMicrotechnologyNanotechnologyThe marked increase in demand for miniaturized consumer products in a broad range of potential applications including medical, telecommunication, avionics, biotechnology and electronics is a result of advancements in miniaturization technologies. Consequently, engineering components are being drastically reduced in size. This coupled with the quest for higher quality components, has imposed more stringent requirements on manufacturing processes and materials used to produce micro components. Hence, the development of ultra precision manufacturing processes to fabricate micro-scale features in engineering products has become a focal point of recent academic and industrial research. However, much attention in the area of micro-manufacturing, especially micro-mechanical machining, has been devoted to building miniature machine tools with nanometer positioning resolution and sub-micron accuracy. There is lack of fundamental understanding of mechanical machining at the micro and nano scale. Specifically, basic understanding of chip formation mechanism, cutting forces, size-effect in specific cutting energy, and machined surface integrity in micro and nano scale machining and knowledge of how these process responses differ from those in macro-scale cutting are lacking. In addition, there is a lack of investigations of micro and nano scale cutting of common engineering materials such as aluminum alloys and ferrous materials. This thesis proposes to advance the understanding of machining at the micro and nano scale for common engineering alloys. This will be achieved through a series of systematic micro and nano cutting experiments. The effects of cutting conditions on the machining forces, chip formation and machined surface morphology in simple orthogonal micro-cutting of a ferrous, P20 mold steel (30 HRC), and a non-ferrous structural alloy, aluminum AL7075 (87 HRB), used in the mold making and rapid prototyping industry will be studied. The data will also be compared with data obtained from conventional macro-scale cutting. In addition, the applicability of conventional metal cutting theory to micro and nano cutting test data will be examined. The analysis will provide a better understanding of machining forces, chip formation, and surface generation in micro and nano scale cutting process and how it differs from macro-scale cutting.Georgia Institute of Technology2005-07-28T17:54:12Z2005-07-28T17:54:12Z2005-03-24Thesis6393248 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/6862en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Micro-/ nano-scale cutting
Aluminum 7075
P20
Steel
Aluminum alloys
Cutting
Micromachining
Microtechnology
Nanotechnology
spellingShingle Micro-/ nano-scale cutting
Aluminum 7075
P20
Steel
Aluminum alloys
Cutting
Micromachining
Microtechnology
Nanotechnology
Ng, Chee Keong
Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
description The marked increase in demand for miniaturized consumer products in a broad range of potential applications including medical, telecommunication, avionics, biotechnology and electronics is a result of advancements in miniaturization technologies. Consequently, engineering components are being drastically reduced in size. This coupled with the quest for higher quality components, has imposed more stringent requirements on manufacturing processes and materials used to produce micro components. Hence, the development of ultra precision manufacturing processes to fabricate micro-scale features in engineering products has become a focal point of recent academic and industrial research. However, much attention in the area of micro-manufacturing, especially micro-mechanical machining, has been devoted to building miniature machine tools with nanometer positioning resolution and sub-micron accuracy. There is lack of fundamental understanding of mechanical machining at the micro and nano scale. Specifically, basic understanding of chip formation mechanism, cutting forces, size-effect in specific cutting energy, and machined surface integrity in micro and nano scale machining and knowledge of how these process responses differ from those in macro-scale cutting are lacking. In addition, there is a lack of investigations of micro and nano scale cutting of common engineering materials such as aluminum alloys and ferrous materials. This thesis proposes to advance the understanding of machining at the micro and nano scale for common engineering alloys. This will be achieved through a series of systematic micro and nano cutting experiments. The effects of cutting conditions on the machining forces, chip formation and machined surface morphology in simple orthogonal micro-cutting of a ferrous, P20 mold steel (30 HRC), and a non-ferrous structural alloy, aluminum AL7075 (87 HRB), used in the mold making and rapid prototyping industry will be studied. The data will also be compared with data obtained from conventional macro-scale cutting. In addition, the applicability of conventional metal cutting theory to micro and nano cutting test data will be examined. The analysis will provide a better understanding of machining forces, chip formation, and surface generation in micro and nano scale cutting process and how it differs from macro-scale cutting.
author Ng, Chee Keong
author_facet Ng, Chee Keong
author_sort Ng, Chee Keong
title Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
title_short Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
title_full Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
title_fullStr Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Study of Micro-/ Nano-Scale Cutting of Aluminum 7075 and P20 Mold Steel
title_sort experimental study of micro-/ nano-scale cutting of aluminum 7075 and p20 mold steel
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/6862
work_keys_str_mv AT ngcheekeong experimentalstudyofmicronanoscalecuttingofaluminum7075andp20moldsteel
_version_ 1716474195208044544