Water Jet Cutting

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1. INTRODUCTION.
Doff
rrrrrrrrrIn the battle to reduce costs, engineering and manufacturing departments are constantly on
the lookout for an edge. The water jet process provides many unique capabilities and advantages that
can prove very effective in the cost battle. Learning more about the water jet technology will give us
an opportunity to put these cost-cutting capabilities to work. Beyond cost cutting, the water jet
process is recognized as the most versatile and fastest growing process in the world. Waterjets are
used in high production applications across the globe. They compliment other technologies such as
milling, laser, EDM, plasma and routers. No poisonous gases or liquids are used in waterjet cutting,
and waterjets do not create hazardous materials or vapors. No heat effected zones or mechanical
stresses are left on a waterjet cut surface. It is truly a versatile, productive, cold cutting process. The
waterjet has shown that it can do things that other technologies simply cannot. From cutting whisper,
thin details in stone, glass and metals; to rapid whole drilling of titanium; for cutting of food, to the
killing of pathogens in beverages and dips, the waterjet has proven itself unique.

. THEORY OF WATERJET CUTTING

Most waterjet cutting theories explain waterjet cutting as a form of micro erosion as described
here. Waterjet cutting works by forcing a large volume of water through a small orifice in the nozzle.
The constant volume of water traveling through a reduced cross sectional area causes the particles to
rapidly accelerate. This accelerated stream leaving the nozzle impacts the material to be cut. The
extreme pressure of the accelerated water particles contacts a small area of the work piece. In this
small area the work piece develops small cracks due to stream impact. The waterjet washes away the
material that "erodes" from the surface of the work piece. The crack caused by the waterjet impact is
now exposed to the waterjet. The extreme pressure and impact of particles in the following stream
cause the small crack to propagate until the material is cut through.

Figure 1: WORKING PRINCIPLE

For cutting thicker materials some abrasives like garnet is added to pure waterjet.
This is called abrasive waterjet and cutting using abrasive jet is called abrasivejet cutting. The high-
pressure abrasivejet cuts thicker and harder materials. Abrasivejet cutting is advancement in the field
of waterjet cutting

3. WATERJET CUTTING PROCESS

Pure waterjet is the original water cutting method. Waterjet cutting uses only a pressurized
stream of water to cut through material. This type of cutting is limited to material with naturally
occurring small cracks or softer materials like disposable diapers, tissue paper, and automotive
interiors. In the cases of tissue paper and disposable diapers the waterjet process creates less
moisture on the material than touching or breathing on it. The figure shows the waterjet cutting
process.

In this process water is increased in pressure by high-pressure pump to about 40000-60000


PSI and is forced through the orifice on to the target material. This high-pressure water on striking the
surface performs the machining operation. The potential energy contained in the water is converted in
the process to kinetic energy, i.e., into jet velocity, thus achieving its "cutting" effect.

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Figure: PURE WATERJET

The basic waterjet process involves water flowing from a pump, through plumbing, and out a
cutting head.
In waterjet cutting, the material removal process can be described as a supersonic erosion
process. It is not pressure, but stream velocity that tears away microscopic pieces or grains of
material. Pressure and velocity are two distinct forms of energy. The pump’s water pressure is
converted to the other form of energy, water velocity by a tiny jewel. A jewel is affixed to the end of
the plumbing tubing. The jewel has a tiny hole in it. The pressurized water passes through this tiny
opening changing the pressure to velocity. At approximately 40,000 psi the resulting stream that
passes out of the orifice is traveling at Mach 2. And at 60,000 psi the speed is over Mach 3.

4. WATERJET MACHINING CENTER

Basic equipment used for waterjet cutting consists of:-


CNC guide machine, PC based programmable controller or microprocessor based control, structural
steel base, servo drive system, "X/Y" carriage, cantilever arm,
motorized "Z" axis, catch tank, cutting table, work piece support grid/material,
filtration system, high pressure pumps, pressure intensifiers, abrasive material disposal/removal
system, injector to draw abrasives into cutting stream, mixing chamber, cutting nozzle (varying orifice
size), abrasive removal system, chiller (optional).

5. APPLICATIONS OF WATERJET CUTTING

Flexible waterjet cutting technology is used in practically all sectors of industry: Aerospace,
residential and industrial construction, mechanical engineering, the glass industry, the wood, textiles
and paper industries, the automotive and its supplier industries, and the electrical, electronic and
foodstuffs industries. Unlike traditional thermal cutting methods, waterjet cutting technology wins
friends with its high level of cost-effectiveness and flexibility. The most diverse materials, from metal
via plastics up to and including granite, can be quickly and precisely worked using a high-pressure jet
of water. Material thickness of 150 mm or more present no difficulties to our cutting processes. The
waterjet achieves optimum cut-edge qualities on both simple and extremely complex contours.

General 2D applications:

• Sheet metal: Stainless steel, carbon steel, high-alloy nickel steels, aluminum, titanium, copper
• Building: Decorative stone, marble, granite, tiles, plasterboard, glass and mineral wool
• Glass: Laminated glass, safety glass, and bulletproof glass
• Foodstuffs: Baked goods, deep-frozen products and fish
• Paper: Cardboard, corrugated cardboard, printing papers
• Miscellaneous: Plywood, leather, textiles, composites, rubber, plastics, sealing materials and foams .

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3D and robot applications:

• Abrasive: Titanium, aluminum and stainless steel motor-vehicle components, turbine


blades, decorative stone or marble.
• Pure water: Motor-vehicle elements such as carpets, door-trims, fenders,
dashboards, instrument panels, rear shelves.

8. CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE SCOPE

Since its development, waterjet machining has seen many improvements in its design.
Waterjet cutting technology is one of the fastest growing major machine tool processes in the world
due to its versatility and ease of operation. Manufacturers are realizing that there are virtually no
limits to what waterjets are capable of cutting and machining. Machine shops of all sizes are realizing
greater efficiency and productivity by implementing UHP waterjets in their operations. Waterjets are
becoming the machine tool of choice for many shops. Since abrasive waterjet (AWJ) technology was
first invented by Flow in the early 1980s, the technology has rapidly evolved with continuous research
and development. What makes waterjets so popular? Waterjets require few secondary operations,
produce net-shaped parts with no heat-affected zone, heat distortion, or mechanical stresses caused
by other cutting methods, can cut with a narrow kerfs, and can provide better usage of raw material
since parts can be tightly nested. As a result of the Flow Master PC control system and intuitive
operation, waterjets are extremely easy to use. Typically, operators can be trained in hours and are
producing high quality parts in hours. Additionally, waterjets can cut virtually any material, leaving a
satin-smooth edge. These benefits add up to significant cost savings per part in industries that have
traditionally defined productivity by cost per hour.
The latest development in the field of waterjet cutting is the use of super water for cutting,
which enhances both abrasive and non-abrasive waterjet cutting.

Advantages of using super-water for abrasive and waterjet cutting are:

• Increased cutting speed


• Narrower kerf cutting width
• Decreased wear on pumps and nozzles
• Decreased abrasive use
• Improved surface finish
• Decreased taper
• Diminished tendency for jet to wet substrates

REFERENCES

1. en.wikipedia.org
2. www.o-keating.com

SEMINAR TOPIC FROM :: www.edufive.com/seminartopics.html

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