Stability Research Considering Non-Linear Change in the Machining of Titanium Thin-Walled Parts

Materials (Basel). 2019 Jun 28;12(13):2083. doi: 10.3390/ma12132083.

Abstract

Aiming to solve the problem whereby the damping process effect is significant and difficult to measure during low-speed machining of titanium alloy thin-walled parts, the ploughing coefficient of the flank face is obtained based on the frequency-domain decomposition (FDD) of the measured vibration signal and the energy balance principle, and then the process-damping prediction model is obtained. Aiming to solve the problem of non-linear change of dynamic characteristics of a workpiece caused by the material removal effect in the machining of titanium alloy thin-walled parts, a prediction model of dynamic characteristics of a workpiece is established based on the structural dynamic modification method. Meanwhile, the effect of material removal on the process-damping coefficient is studied, and the internal relationship between the process-damping coefficient and the dynamic characteristics of the workpiece is revealed. The stability lobe diagram is obtained by the full discretization in the titanium alloy milling process. The correctness of the model and stability prediction is verified by experiments under different working conditions. It is found that the coupling characteristics of process-damping and workpiece dynamic characteristics control the stability of the milling process. The research results can provide theoretical support for accurate characterization and process optimization of titanium alloy thin-walled workpiece milling.

Keywords: dynamic characteristics; milling; process-damping; stability lobe diagram; thin-walled weak rigidity parts.