Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/16378
Title: MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF SURFACE ROUGHNESS AND FORCES FOR TURNING OF EN-353
Authors: KUMAR, VINAY
Keywords: SURFACE ROUGHNESS
CUTTING FORCES
FEED FORCES
THRUST FORCES
REGRESSION ANALYSIS
TAGUCHI
Issue Date: Jul-2018
Series/Report no.: TD-4270;
Abstract: In manufacturing industries metal cutting, surface finish and material removal rate of a product is very crucial in determining the quality. Good surface finish not only assures quality, but also reduces manufacturing cost. Surface finish is important in terms of tolerances, it reduces assembly time and avoids the need for secondary operation, thus reduces operation time and leads to overall cost reduction. Besides, good-quality turned surface is significant in improving fatigue strength, corrosion resistance, and creep life. This study focuses on analysing cutting parameters based on the Taguchi method, a powerful tool to design optimization for quality, is used to minimize surface roughness. A full factorial 27 experiments, the signal-to-noise (S:N) ratio, analysis of variance (ANOVA) and regression analysis are employed to investigate the cutting characteristics of mild steel bars(EN-353) using carbide cutting tools. The main objective is to study the effect of cutting speed, feed and depth of cut on surface roughness of mild steel in turning operation using carbide tool. Different cutting parameters have different influential on the surface finish. The cutting speed, feed and depth of cut were decide using the suitable range recommended; which were 36.313m/min, 80.29m/min and 125.66m/min are cutting speed, 0.05mm/rev, 0.10mm/rev and 0.15mm/rev for feed and lastly 0.6mm, 0.9mm and 1.2mm for depth of cut. The specimen was turned under different level of parameters and was measured the surface roughness using a Taylor Hobson’s Surtronic 3+. From the result, it is concluded that higher cutting speed and lower feed produce better surface finish. The optimum cutting parameters were 125.66m/min, 0.05mm/rev and 0.6mm, which produced minimum surface roughness of 1.33μm. According to the ANOVA analysis, feed is the dominant factor by 85.82%.
URI: http://dspace.dtu.ac.in:8080/jspui/handle/repository/16378
Appears in Collections:M.E./M.Tech. Mechanical Engineering

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