Papers by Author: Gautier List

Paper TitlePage

Abstract: Numerical and experimental approaches are mutually conducted to investigate the temperature rise in steel machining at high cutting speed. The process is modeled using a fully coupled thermo-mechanical finite element scheme. Cutting tests were carried out at 38 m/s on a ballistic orthogonal cutting set-up equipped with an intensified CCD camera. Analysis of experimental results leads to determine the variables which control heat transfer between the tool and chip. A discussion about the most important parameters controlling the temperature rise at the tool-chip interface is then proposed. The results also show that the temperature-dependence of the frictional stress modeling can improve the accuracy of the numerical simulations.
1502
Abstract: Wear modeling makes it possible to predict the evolution of wear profile and explain wear mechanism from process variables, such as temperature, pressure and sliding velocity etc. A composite crater wear model considering adhesive and diffusion wear is established by means of experiment and modeling in conventional speed machining. A series of cutting tests are performed to obtain wear profiles and corresponding process variables. The constants in wear model are fitted by regression analysis with crater wear tests. This crater wear model shows a good predictive capability in conventional cutting speed.
1891
Abstract: Chip velocity is a crucial parameter in metal cutting. The continuous variation of chip velocity in primary shear zone can not be obtained from conventional shear plane model. Therefore a general streamline model was used to investigate the distribution of chip velocity field in metal cutting. This paper also verified the continuity of plastic flow in metal cutting by tracing the variation of particle area. The velocity of chip material was calculated from the mathematical expression of streamline model. The velocity results were compared with conventional shear plane model.
471
Abstract: The tool-chip contact length, as an important parameter controlling the geometry of tool crater wear and understanding chip formation mechanism, is widely investigated in machining. The aim of this paper is to study the influence of chip curl on tool-chip contact length by means of experimental observations with high cutting speed. The relationship between tool-chip contact length, chip radius of curvature and uncut chip thickness was investigated. Experimental results show the effect of increasing spiral chip radius on tool-chip contact length with low uncut chip thickness in high speed machining.
71
Abstract: The streamline method was used to investigate the plastic strain rate in machining. The streamline function presented in this paper is a general equation with three parameters controlling the complex variation of flow line shape. Velocity and deformation field were obtained by streamline analysis. The validation of this model was conducted by comparing with other experimental results published. It shows that the streamline model presented in the paper can be applied to the evaluation of strain rate in machining.
490
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