Comparative Study on Thermal Behaviour, Tool Wear and Surface Roughness in Milling EN8 Steel for Sustainable Machining

EN8钢铣削加工中热行为、刀具磨损和表面粗糙度的对比研究及其在可持续加工中的应用

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Abstract

Dry machining of medium-carbon steels plays an important role in sustainable manufacturing; however, high tool wear and thermal instability pose challenges. The study aims to evaluate the kinematic-tribological performance of EN8 steel during dry milling and compare up-milling and down-milling to trade-off tool life and surface finish. The experiments were conducted using a central composite design (CCD) as part of response surface methodology (RSM), with 36 runs to evaluate interactions among spindle speed, feed rate, and depth of cut. Down-milling outperformed up-milling, achieving 12.4% less tool wear, 45.9% better surface finish, and a 47 °C lower peak temperature from cutting. The above benefits are attributed to the unique kinematics of chip formation during down-milling, which offers lower friction at entry and better heat dissipation, contrasting with the high-friction ploughing phase of up-milling. Grey relational analysis (GRA) found that down-milling with a mid-range cutting speed (22.31 m/min) and a low feed rate (25 mm/min) provided a multi-objective optimum. The findings support the existence of a kinematic-tribological coupling, providing a solid single approach to optimising the dry machining of harder materials.

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