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    Feasibility Study of Adopting Minimal Quantities of Lubrication for End Milling Aluminium

    190836_190836.pdf (545.3Kb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Boswell, Brian
    Islam, Mohammad Nazrul
    Date
    2012
    Type
    Conference Paper
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Boswell, Brian and Islam, Mohammad Nazrul. 2012. Feasibility Study of Adopting Minimal Quantities of Lubrication for End Milling Aluminium, in Korsunsky, A.M. (ed), World Congress on Engineering 2012, Jun 4-6 2012, pp. 1358-1362. London, UK: International Association of Engineers.
    Source Title
    Lecture Notes in Engineering and Computer Science
    Source Conference
    World Congress on Engineering 2012
    Additional URLs
    http://www.iaeng.org/publication/WCE2012/WCE2012_pp1358-1362.pdf
    ISBN
    978-988-19252-2-0
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/20646
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    End milling is a very common metal cutting process used for the machining of most types of metal. The process is inherently intermittent causing the tool tip edge to constantly fluctuate between various levels of temperatures, specifically from cold to 300oC when cutting Al alloy. During dry end milling cutting temperatures need to remain within the design specifications of the tool tip. Even working with Al alloy the tool tip is subjected to thermal cyclic stresses. Conventional wisdom states that it is essential to use flood cooling during end milling, as intermittent cooling increases the effect of thermal shock and build up edge. Al alloy - unlike other materials - needs cutting fluid to avoid smearing the insert edges and to improve the surface finish. Modern machining companies constantly face the challenges of environmental issues that affect the manufacturing costs of machined parts. New environmental manufacturing techniques need to be developed for companies to remain competitive in the future. The research presented in this paper represents the experimentation involved in determining a suitable environmental alternative to using copious amounts of cutting fluid during end milling of Al alloy. Previous experimental evaluation of Minimal Quantities of Lubrication (MQL) when applied to the machining of Al alloy has proved to be inconclusive.

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