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The effect of high speed machining on the surface integrity of certain titanium alloys

M.Ing. / This dissertation documents the stages involved in determining the parameters that define surface integrity. Chapter one gives a basic introduction to the project; the problem statement; scope of work and project obstacles. This chapter laid down the requirements for the literature study in Chapters two and three. The literature study discusses machining, high-speed machining, titanium alloys and high speed machining of titanium alloys. Information from the literature study was used to determine the experimental program presented in Chapter 4. Two materials were investigated in this study: grade 2 titanium (commercially pure) and grade 5 titanium (an alloy containing 6% Aluminium and 4% Vanadium). A fixed feed rate of 0.25mm/rev was selected. Two depths of cut were used: 0.2mm and 1mm. Cuts were performed both lubricated and un-lubricated. Different cutting speeds were used both inside and outside recommended ranges. Surface roughness tests, optical microscopy, scanning-electron microscopy, microhardness tests and x-ray diffraction were used in the experimental program. Results obtained presented trends seen in previous work on surface integrity. Efforts were made to reduce errors in obtaining and examining data. Conclusions were drawn with regards to each surface integrity parameter tested for. It was found that different cutting speeds affect each surface integrity parameter differently.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:9396
Date15 August 2012
CreatorsVan Trotsenburg, Samantha
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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