MACHINING ADVANCED
TITANIUM ALLOYS
Advantages of Difficult Ti Alloys
Lightweight
Strong at elevated temperatures
Gamma Ti alloys are burn
resistant
Attractive to industry
Aerospace
Auto racing
Titanium Alloys
Alpha alloys (Ti, lightly alloyed alloys)
Essentially pure titanium and relatively soft
Chip control is a problem
Alpha/Beta alloys (Ti 6Al 4V)
Very common
More difficult to machine
Beta alloys (Ti 5553, Beta C, Ti 17)
More heavily alloyed
More difficult to machine due to hardness
Gamma alloys (TiAl)
Of great recent interest
Very difficult to machine
Classification of Ti alloys
4
Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr
5
Ti 5Al-2.5Sn
α-alloy
Characterized by
Satisfactory strength
Toughness
Creep resistance
Weldability
Suitable for cryogenic applications (no ductile-brittle
transition)
Tensile strength 890MPa (129,000 psi), hardness 34
HRC
Cannot be heat treated
6
Ti-6Al-4V
α+β alloy
Typically
Good fabricability
High room temperature strength
Moderate elevated temperature strength
Properties can be controlled by controlling the β phase
through heat treatment
More than 20% β makes the alloy difficult to weld
Typical tensile strength 950 Mpa (138,000 psi)
7
Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al
Near β alloy
β alloys are generally formable and have a high cycle
fatigue strength
Developed for airframe forging applications
Typical tensile strength 1310MPa (190,000 psi),
hardness 41HRC
Heat treatable to very high strengths
8
Ti-5Al-5V-5Mo-3Cr
Near β alloy
Characteristics:
Low elastic modulus
Good hardenability by heat treatment
Low heat transfer rate
Tensile strength1240 MPa (180,000 psi)
Good strength to weight ratio
9
Ti-48Al-2Nb-2Cr
γ alloy
Excellent high temperature
properties
Burn resistant
Very low density
Typical tensile strength
1200 Mpa (175,000 psi)
Photo courtesy of ATI
Opportunities and Challenges of
Innovative Alloys
Material Machinability Rating Number of Inserts
Required
Typical Al alloy 140 0.7
B1112 100 1
Ductile iron, 4140 50 2
Ti 6Al 4V 35 3
IN 718 15 6.6
Ti 5553 12 8.3
Ti Al 5 20
SPECIFIC PROBLEMS
Opportunities and Challenges of
Beta and Gamma Ti Alloys
Low ductility
Surface and sub-surface cracking
Surface integrity compromised
Good high temperature strength
High stress on cutting
Tends to “crush” the cutting edge
Poor thermal conductivity
Heat concentrated at cutting edge Photo courtesy of Aspinwall, et. al.
Tends to promote deformation and University of Birmingham
cratering
Ti chemically reactive
Cratering
Danger of fire (alpha and some beta
alloys)
Difficulties in Machining
Titanium
Titanium alloys work harden – Notching
Titanium alloys have high heat capacity, low conductivity – heat
concentrated at cutting edge
Deformation
Wear
Cratering
Poor chip control
Titanium has a low modulus of elasticity - Part deflection
Titanium is reactive – built-up edge, cratering and fires
Chip Formation
Opportunities and Challenges of
Innovative Alloys
Traditional techniques
High pressure coolant
High lead angles in turning
Micrograin carbide
Milling techniques: high feed, trochoidal, and
optimized roughing
Non-traditional techniques
Diamond tools
Laser assisted machining
Opportunities and Challenges of
Innovative Alloys
Beta and Gamma alloys are difficult to machine
Special techniques are often used
No matter what technique is used, tool life is poor
Try to minimize amount of stock to be removed
Try to minimize heat
HIGH PRESSURE
COOLANT
Opportunities and Challenges of
Innovative Ti Alloys
High pressure coolant may result in 10 fold
improvement in tool life compared to conventional
coolant
Flow rate may be more important than pressure
Running at too high pressure generates chips that
interrupt coolant flow
High Pressure Coolant Systems
A range of high
performance tools
designed to deliver coolant
directly at the insert cutting
zone.
Capable of delivering
coolant pressures ranging
from 15 – 4000 psi (1 to
275 bar)
High pressure coolant systems
Conventional Coolant
Titanium 6AL4V
Low ‘Thermal Conductivity &
Low Modulus of Elasticity.
Thin, High Velocity
Chip
Small Concentrated
Heat Zone Cutting data 130 – 200 sfpm
Copyright© Seco Tools AB
Tool life is typically 20 minutes
Failure mode – typically flank wear
Feature - Long uncontrollable chips
High pressure coolant systems
Pressurised Coolant
Coolant pressure deflects
chips to break into smaller
more manageable pieces.
Pressurised jet of coolant,
directed at the cutting zone
Reduces temperature in cutting zone.
Allowing higher cutting speed and
longer tool life.
High pressure coolant systems
Requirements (checklist):
At high pressure consider:
Encapsulation of machine.
Exhaust/Ventilation.
Filtration of coolant (particles in coolant may “sand blast”
surface)
Increased consumption of coolant (+10%).
Larger pump means higher volume -> bigger coolant tank.
High pressure coolant beam may deform thin-walled
component.
High pressure coolant beam can be harmful to hands and
fingers.
The higher the pressure the more complex the system.
High pressure coolant systems
Benefits:
Elevated Cutting Data
= Increased Productivity
Extended Tool-Life
= Cost Reductions
= Reduced Programme stops for Insert
Indexing
Improved Chip Control
= Less Downtime due to Operator
Intervention
Improved Surface finish
High pressure coolant systems
Titanium Alloy Ti 6Al-4V (typical values)
Cutting speed +50%
Cycle time reduction –50 %
Insert consumption – 60 %
Excellent chip control, fewer stops
(see picture)
Conventional High pressure
Efficient coolant delivery coolant
coolant
Improved surface finish
Customer Experience – Ti 6Al 4V
Conventional Coolant
Customer experience – blisk turning
Cycle time reduction 50% +
Carbide consumption -60% +
Efficient coolant delivery +++
Chip control +++
Improved surface finish
Conventional
High pressure
coolant
Ti 6Al-4V
Customer Experience – Ti 6Al 4V
Total cycle conventional coolant application
18 * index
Setup 4%
Index INS 10%
17 * remove chips
Remove Chips 14%
Machining 72%
Customer Experience – Ti 6Al 4V
Total cycle for machining with Jetstream ToolingTM
Total time saved 240 min
Increased machine usage
5 * index Setup 11%
Index INS 7%
0 * remove chips
Remove Chips 0%
Machining 82%
29
Lead Angles - Taking the Lead
Material = Inconel 625
30
Lead Angles
31
Lead Angles
Material = Inconel 625
32
Some Guidelines
Use low cutting speeds.
Maintain high feed rates.
Temperature is not affected by feed rate as much as by speed,
and the highest feed rates consistent with good machining should
be used.
Use copious amounts of cutting fluid.
Use sharp tools and replace them at the first sign of wear. Tool
failure occurs quickly after a small initial amount of wear.
Never stop feeding while tool and work are in moving contact.
Allowing a tool to dwell in moving contact causes work hardening
and promotes smearing, galling, seizing and tool breakdown.
DIAMOND TOOLS
34
Titanium machining with PCD
General conclusions
RCMW 3, uncoated, vc 150 m/min, f 0.2
Cooling of cutting edge is of outmost mm/rev, ap 0.5 mm, TIC 11 min, Ti 5553
importance!
Coolant pressure below 70 bar is not
enough.
Coatings improves tool life.
R-style inserts are definitely
preferable due to reduced heat
concentration in cutting edge. RCMW 3, uncoated, vc 150 m/min, f 0.3
mm/rev, ap 0.5 mm, TIC 7 min, Ti 5553
E- and F-style inserts are more
suitable in Ti 6-4, while S- and E-
style is more suitable for Ti 5-5-5-3.
2016-10-06
35
Two cases
DNGA 432E10-L1-K Fine grained PCD
Vc 130 m/min Vc 170 m/min
11.12.2012
36
Speed of 130 m/min (425 sfpm)
EDS analysis
11.12.2012
37
Speed of 170 m/min (560 sfpm)
EDS analysis
11.12.2012
38
Speed of 130 m/min (425 sfpm)
Chemical wear
Material build-up from
work piece on cutting
edge.
11.12.2012
39
Speed of 130 m/min (425 sfpm)
Light grey areas =
residues from work piece
material
Chemical wear
Metal build-up
11.12.2012 Stefan G Larsson
40
Speed of 170 m/min (560 sfpm)
Chemical wear
Notch wear
Heavy flank wear
Material build-up from
work piece on cutting
edge.
11.12.2012 Stefan G Larsson
41
Conclusions
Increased cutting speed results in higher
temperatures in cutting zone. This leads to a
greater and faster chemical wear of the PCD since
Ti is a great carbide former.
Reduction of generated heat in cutting zone is
necessary.
Adding of an inert, or near inert, zone between
workpiece material and cutting edge could improve
tool life.
11.12.2012 Stefan G Larsson
42
Titanium machining with coated PCD
Results
E10 edge prep. E10 edge prep.
Coarse crater wear More even wear
Big flank wear Less flank wear
RCMW 3, uncoated, vc 150 m/min, f 0.2 RCMW 3, TiAlN, vc 150 m/min, f 0.2
mm/rev, ap 0.5 mm, TIC 11 min, Ti 5553 mm/rev, ap 0.5 mm, TIC 11 min, Ti 5553
2016-10-06
43
Cutting material
Fine grained PCD (2 microns) Insert geometry
F - sharp RPMW 43
Coated
Uncoated
E10 - hone
Coarse grained PCD (25 microns) Ti 5553
F - sharp
Coated
Uncoated
E10 - hone
44
Test strategy
A number of variations in speed, feed,
edge preparations, coating or not, and
so on, were tested.
The best combination was then
chosen to be run as a tool life test.
45
Test 1
PCD05 F, uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.07 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.022 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Conventional milling
TIC 30 min
46
Test 2
PCD05 F, uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Conventional milling
TIC 15 min
47
Test 3
PCD05 F, uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 15 min
48
Test 4
PCD05 E10,
uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 15 min
49
Test 5
PCD05 F, coated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 15 min
50
Test 6
PCD30M F,
uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 15 min
51
Test 7
PCD30M F,
uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.18 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.055 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 11.7 min
52
Test 8 (Repeat of 7 with the same edge)
PCD30M F,
uncoated
4000 rpm - 502.6
m/min
0.18 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.055 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 23.4 min
53
Test 9
PCD30M F,
uncoated
4500 rpm – 565.5
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 13.3 min
54
Test 10
PCD30M F, coated
4500rpm – 565.5
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.044 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 13.3 min
55
Test 11
PCD30M F, coated
4000 rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
Repetition of test 6
TIC 15 min
56
Test 12 (Repeat of 11 with the same edge)
PCD30M F, coated
4000rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 30 min
57
Test 13 (Repeat of 11 with the same edge)
PCD30M F, coated
4000 rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 45 min
58
Test 14 (Repeat of 11 with the same edge)
PCD30M F, coated
4000rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 60 min
59
Test 15 (Repeat of 11 with the same edge)
PCD30M F, coated
4000rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 75 min
60
Test 16 (Repeat of 11 with the same edge)
PCD30M F, coated
4000 rpm – 502.6
m/min
0.14 mm/tooth
Average chip thickness
0.031 mm
0.2 mm DOC
Climb milling
TIC 90 min
Not end of tool life
61
Alicona comparisons
The same amount of material
removed, but Test 2 has
twice as high feed as
Test 1 Test 1.
Test 2 Observe that scales are different!
62
Alicona comparisons
Test 2 – Conventional milling
Observe that scales are different!
Test 3 – Climb milling
63
Alicona measurements
After test 16: 90 min TIC
64
Volume loss comparison
Volume loss comparison
4500000 200000
4000000 180000
TIC
160000
3500000 [min]
140000 Test 1 30
3000000
120000
Test 2 15
Volume loss /time unit
Volume loss
2500000 Test 3 15
100000
Test 4 15
2000000
80000 Test 5 15
1500000 Test 6 15
60000
Test
1000000 23,4
40000 7-8
500000 20000
Test 9 13,3
Test
0 0 13,3
Test 1 Test 2 Test 3 Test 4 Test 5 Test 6 Test 7-8 Test 9 Test 10 Test 11-
10
16 Test
90
11-16
Volume loss [μm³] Volume loss/time unit [μm³/min]
65
Summary
For milling, coarse Avergage chip
grained PCD is the thickness should be
best choice. 0.03-0.045 mm
F-style edge prep is (0.001 – 0.002”)
preferable.
Coating does not
have a big effect on
tool life, but improves
wear detection.
Summary
Stability problems
Sensitive to find the right speed/feed combination
Long tool solution at the end of the silent bar
Too low lubricant level in emulsion
F-style edge prep is much more suitable for this
application than first believed
Niobium nitride improves tool life and reduces wear
Combination of small depth of cut and the standard
high pressure coolant inducer is not an optimized
solution.
2016-10-06
Surface quality
Ra after 1.75 min
Vc 175 m/min (575 sfpm) f 0.40 m/rev (0.016 ipr)
0.90
0.80
0.70
0.60
0.50
0.40
0.30
0.20
0.10
0.00
PCD05 PCD20 PCD30M
2016-10-06 Stefan G Larsson
Chip formation
2016-10-06 Stefan G Larsson
Chip formation
Friction dependance
Coating
Grit size
Easier to handle small/short chips
2016-10-06 Stefan G Larsson
Coating
New combination coating for titanium machining
(Ti,Al)N+NbN
Reduces chemical wear
2016-10-06 Stefan G Larsson
Coolant
Most important points in titanium machining regarding
coolant
Flow rate
Flow rate
Flow rate
Lubrication level
Flow rate
2016-10-06 Stefan G Larsson
OPTIMIZED ROUGHING
Arc Of Contact principles
Arc of Contact increases
as the tool enters a
corner. Effective
ae
If compensation in
feedrate or Ae is not
made, the tool will most ae
likely become
overloaded.
Chatter
Poor surface finish
Tool breakage
Increased build-up
Undercut corners Linear milling:
ae = programmed ae
Trochoidal/Hard Milling
The Arc Of Contact principle
Where :
R = Radius of tool
ae = radial depth of cut
ά = arccos (R-ae)/R))
ά
R Average
Chip Thickness = sine(ά) X FPT
ae
The Arc Of Contact principle
Big arc of contact
Small arc of contact
Big A.O.C
=
Lower Vc
Optimized Roughing
“Optimized roughing strategies”
© 2016-10-06, all rights 77
reserved
Trochoidal Milling
Cutter diameter should be no larger than 70% of
the slot width
Infeeds of less than 10% should be used
Reduce the arc of contact to limit temperature
development
Small radial cutting depth.
Optimized Roughing Strategies:
Strategies that actively manage all or a combination of
the following cutting conditions:
radial width of cut
arc of contact
chip thickness
feedrate
Goal of these methods is to maximize MRR while
smoothing machine load, increasing tool life, and
reducing cycle time
© 2016-10-06, all rights 79
reserved
What NOT to do
© 2016-10-06, all rights 80
reserved
Optimized Roughing Tools
Best Tools:
Many flutes
4+ flutes for medium steels, stainless steels, super alloys
2-4 flutes for aluminum alloys and soft steels
5+ flutes for hardened steels, super alloys
High Ap
Depths of cut up to 4XD are easily achieved in stable setups and good
tool holders
Select tools with larger core diameters or with dual cores to maximize
rigidity
Chip Control
Chip splitters or corn cob style tools
Size
Tool diameters depend on feature size
Most common sizes:
1/2” – 5/8”
81
Additional geometrical features
• Chips are split with a length of 1*Dc
• Splits are positioned 0.25 * Dc after each other
0.25*Dc 1*Dc
Tooth 1 Tooth 2 Tooth 3 Tooth 4 Tooth 1
1* Dc