Lei Guo , Jintao Song , Chen Xu , Chuqing Cao , Xiaohui Liu , Chenxiao Li , Bei Wang , Jizhuang Hui
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abrasive grains and the associated bonding agent are the two significant components in the manufacturing of fixed abrasive machining tools. The material properties and interfacial bonding behavior between the grains and the bonding matrix determine machining performance. In precision machining processes with diamond abrasives, the primary failure modes of fixed abrasive tools are grain dislodgement and premature loss, leading to abrupt change in machining load and ultimately causing inaccurate and inefficient machining performance. This study develops a comprehensive model for understanding abrasive grain retention and interfacial failure mechanisms in resin-bonded diamond tools. Finite element analysis of a single diamond grain embedded in a resin matrix was conducted to examine the influence of the grain shape, protruding height, and orientation angle on critical interfacial failure force. A series of single diamond scratching experiments validated the model, revealing that the maximum retention force reached 43.56 N for grains with a 0.9 mm protruding height and a 60° orientation angle. The results also show that, within a specific grain size range, grain shape—quantified by the sphere deviation coefficient proposed in this paper, has the greatest impact on retention and failure behavior. Protruding height plays a secondary role, while the contribution of orientation angle is minimal. These findings provide valuable insights for the design, manufacture, and optimization of precision abrasive machining tools, particularly for applications requiring high precision and reliability.
期刊介绍:
DRM is a leading international journal that publishes new fundamental and applied research on all forms of diamond, the integration of diamond with other advanced materials and development of technologies exploiting diamond. The synthesis, characterization and processing of single crystal diamond, polycrystalline films, nanodiamond powders and heterostructures with other advanced materials are encouraged topics for technical and review articles. In addition to diamond, the journal publishes manuscripts on the synthesis, characterization and application of other related materials including diamond-like carbons, carbon nanotubes, graphene, and boron and carbon nitrides. Articles are sought on the chemical functionalization of diamond and related materials as well as their use in electrochemistry, energy storage and conversion, chemical and biological sensing, imaging, thermal management, photonic and quantum applications, electron emission and electronic devices.
The International Conference on Diamond and Carbon Materials has evolved into the largest and most well attended forum in the field of diamond, providing a forum to showcase the latest results in the science and technology of diamond and other carbon materials such as carbon nanotubes, graphene, and diamond-like carbon. Run annually in association with Diamond and Related Materials the conference provides junior and established researchers the opportunity to exchange the latest results ranging from fundamental physical and chemical concepts to applied research focusing on the next generation carbon-based devices.