Machinability Studies on 17-4 PH Stainless Steel Under Cryogenic Cooling Environment
Date
2017
Authors
Sivaiah, Potta
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
17-4 precipitated hardened stainless steel (PH SS) is widely used in various areas
including nuclear reactor components, marine constructions, jet engine parts, aircraft
fittings, missile fittings, oil field valve parts and rotors of the centrifugal compressors
owing to excellent properties like high corrosion resistance, high strength and good
ductility. Productivity improvement while machining of 17-4 PH SS is a difficult work
due to the limitation of higher cutting conditions. 17-4 PH SS material is treated as
difficult to cut material due to formation of built up edges (BUE) on the cutting tool
during machining and difficulty in chip control, which causes for poor surface quality as
well as increases the number of tools required for machining. One of the methods to
overcome above mentioned problems is to use of conventional coolants. But, in the
recent years, environmental conscious regulations have became stringent in terms of
disposal of chemically contaminated conventional coolants from the health and
environmental safe prospective. Because of these reasons, nowadays, metal cutting
industries are looking towards new sustainable machining method to reach the target set
by the environmentally conscious regulations in terms of usage and disposal of chemical
contaminant conventional coolants without sacrificing the productivity. Hence, the
present work, focused on cryogenic machining which is recently developed eco-friendly
as well as efficient cooling technology.
The present work is divided into three phases while machining of 17-4 PH SS. In the
first phase, experiments were conducted based on the one factor at a time approach to
study the individual effect of process parameters like cutting velocity, feed rate and depth
of cut on performance characteristics like cutting temperature, tool flank wear, material
removal rate (MRR), chip morphology and surface integrity (surface topography, surface
finish, microhardness, white layer thickness) under various cooling environments like
cryogenic (liquid nitrogen), minimum quantity lubrication (MQL), wet machining and
dry conditions. It was found that as the cutting velocity, feed rate and depth of cutincreases, response like cutting temperature, flank wear and MRR were increased
respectively under all the cooling environments. Whereas, in the case of surface
roughness, decreasing trend was observed at the cutting velocity variation and increasing
trend was found for feed rate and depth of cut variations conditions respectively. In
overall, it was also evident from the experimental results that cryogenic machining
significantly improved the machining performance and product performance all the
cutting conditions. From result, it was found that cryogenic machining is selected as a
best feasible machining method for 17-4 PH SS and it was selected for next phases of the
work.
On the other way machining efficiency, quality of the product and machining cost highly
depending on the selection of optimum machining conditions. In the second phase,
Taguchi L9 orthogonal array experimental design has been used for optimization of
cutting conditions for single and multiple objective responses under the cryogenic
cooling environment. Taguchi method was used for single response optimization and
ANOVA was used to find the most influenced process parameters on each response.
Gray relational analysis (GRA) and Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to Ideal
Solution (TOPSIS) optimization techniques have been applied for multi response
optimization, best multi optimization tool which suits for the current study have been
selected through conformation tests. From the conformation test results, it was observed
that Taguchi determined optimum cutting conditions significantly improved the turning
performance characteristic during machining of 17-4 PH SS. Whereas, in the case of
multi response optimization condition, GRA technique substantially improved the turning
performance characteristic when compared to the TOPSIS technique.
In the third phase, correlation models were developed for modeling of cryogenic turning
process by finding out the relation between the input process parameters and output
responses using Response Surface Methodology (RSM) for cost effective research
methodology. In additions to this, interaction effects of process parameters on turning
performance characteristics were studied using 3D surface plots. From the modelingconformation test results, it was observed that close agreement was found between the
actual and predicted values. From interaction plots of surface roughness, it was observed
that the high level of cutting velocity and low levels of feed rate and depth of cut could be
contributed to generate lower surface roughness respectively. Whereas, from interaction
plots of flank wear and MRR, it was found that the highest levels of process parameters
could produce high flank wear and maximum MRR respectively.
Description
Keywords
Department of Mechanical Engineering, 17-4 PH SS, Sustainable machining, Environmental friendly machining, Cryogenic machining, MQL, Tool wear, Material removal rate, Chip morphology, Surface, integrity, Taguchi, optimization, Grey Relational Analysis, TOPSIS, Response Surface Methodology