The orthogonal in-situ machining of single and polycrystalline aluminum and copper, volume 1
Abstract
Metal cutting is a unique deformation process characterized by large strains, exceptionally high strain rates and few constraints to the deformation. These factors, along with the difficulty of directly measuring the shear angle, make chip formation difficult to model and understand. One technique for skirting the difficulty of post mortem chip measurement is to perform a cutting experiment dynamically in a scanning electron microscope. The performance of the in-situ experiment with full instrumentation allows for component force measurement, orientation measurement (on a round single crystal disk) and a timing device, all superimposed below the deformation on the TV monitor and recorded for future viewing. This allows the sher angle to be directly measured for the screen along with the other needed information.
- Publication:
-
Ph.D. Thesis
- Pub Date:
- May 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982PhDT........22C
- Keywords:
-
- Aluminum;
- Copper;
- Metal Cutting;
- Plastic Deformation;
- Polycrystals;
- Single Crystals;
- Crystallography;
- Electron Microscopy;
- Orthogonality;
- Shear Strain;
- Velocity Measurement;
- Engineering (General)