Smooth Operations

Author Cutting Tool Engineering
Published
May 01, 2011 - 11:15am

Superabrasive wheels add science to the art of polishing.

A major advantage of grinding vs. other metal-removal methods is its ability to impart extremely fine surface finishes. Now, advances in grinding techniques and wheel technology are pushing that capability into the realm of what traditionally has been considered polishing, using slurries of loose abrasives. The loose abrasive polishing process is said to be slower and less repeatable than grinding. 

Walter_femoral_knee_grind.tif

Courtesy of Walter Grinders

Superabrasive wheels easily can produce finishes in the range of 18 µin. Ra and finer as illustrated by this femoral knee component ground in a 5-axis Helitronic Walter grinder. In addition, advances in wheel technology are enabling the production of finishes in low-single-digit µin. Rrange, formerly considered the realm of polishing.

Mike Hitchiner, OEM technology manager for Saint-Gobain Abrasives, Worcester, Mass., considers the overlap between grinding and polishing to be in the 1 to 4 µin. Ra range of surface finishes. “The gray area between grinding and polishing is where the competition is.”

What level of finish actually constitutes polishing is a matter of opinion. Glen Rosier, applications engineer/business development for Abrasive Technology Inc., Lewis Center, Ohio, said: “Polishing is defined differently by each and every customer. When someone refers to polishing, I always ask what Rathey are looking for. A lot of people consider a polish to be a 5, 7 or 9, while my idea is a bright polish, which is somewhere around 2 µin. Ra or better. Whenever a customer says he needs a certain finish, I ask him to send me a part. I have it measured with a surface profilometer so I know what he is really talking about.”

The appearance of a polished surface may not accurately reflect actual surface roughness. “We did a grinding test for a customer who was trying to generate what he called a bright polish,” Rosier said. “He took a competitor’s wheel and ran a part, then he took our wheel and ran a part, and he kept repeating that the other part looked better than ours.” 

Rosier said the competitor-ground part actually did look smoother, and suggested measuring the surface finish on a profilometer. The competitor-ground part measured 3.5 to 4 µin. Ra, while the part polished with the Abrasive Technology wheel was 1.8 to 2.2 µin. Ra. “The other wheel was just polishing the peaks of unevenness off the surface, where our wheel actually generated a superior finish,” Rosier said. He attributed the results to differences between the two wheels’ blend of bond and superabrasive grit.

2discs.psd

Courtesy of Abrasive Technology

In some situations, polishing discs with fixed superabrasives, such as these Genesis diamond abrasive polishing discs from Abrasive Technology, can offer advantages over methods that employ loose abrasives. The approximately 30× magnifications show the 220-grit abrasive of the left-hand disc (left) and the 600-grit abrasive of the right-hand disc (right). 

Polishing applications using superabrasive wheels exist in nearly every industry segment. One example is carbide dies used to form aluminum cans. The dies essentially are plungers made of carbide with a high percentage of cobalt to enhance toughness. Polishing the dies is challenging, Rosier noted, because the combination of relatively soft cobalt with hard carbide promotes frequent wheel loading, requiring it to be touched up frequently with dressing sticks or truing wheels. 

For such parts, polishing typically involves rough, semifinish and finish grinding with 180-, 600- and 1,200- to 2,000-grit wheels, respectively. Each step removes less material from the plunger surface. Final finishes are in the range of 1 to 2 µin. Ra

It Takes a System

While creating a polished surface with a grinding wheel requires tight control of all grinding system elements, “many times the customer believes the diamond wheel alone is going to solve every problem that he has,” Rosier said. For example, job shops often wish to use the grinding equipment they have, rather than employing what might be best for a certain job. In some cases, “If we evaluate a situation and the customer doesn’t have sufficient equipment to do what he is trying to accomplish, we may suggest that he is not going to have success with his existing setup,” he said.

In applications where off-the-shelf abrasive and bond combinations aren’t productive, a custom wheel can be appropriate. “We may have to adjust the bonds for specific conditions,” Rosier said. “Bonds for polishing in many situations are a variety of phenolic- or polyimide-type materials. They are simply easier to work with, and there are more additives, such as nondiamond polishing materials, available to enhance the grinding characteristics, compared to vitrified bonds. The plastic bonds are more pliable in general and more easily grind and remove material.” 

StGobain#1.tif

Courtesy of Saint-Gobain

Superabrasive polishing tools similar to this 3mm-dia. CBN one can impart surface finishes in the neighborhood of 0.05µm Ra when polishing parts such as fuel injector components.

Saint-Gobain’s Hitchiner agreed that, to maximize polish quality, a wheel must be carefully matched with the grinding machine. For example, Saint-Gobain has application specialists who review customer processes and work with the company’s R&D group to create custom grinding packages. In addition to wheel configurations, those packages can include special quills and spindles. 

A key factor is the precision of the work drive. “When I look at a machine, I always look straight away at the dimensional and stiffness specs compared with the required part tolerances,” Hitchiner said. “For example, if the roundness tolerance of a fuel injector valve seat is 0.25µm, you should be sure that your workhead rotational accuracy, which is the primary driver for part accuracy, is on the order of 0.1µm.” 

4-metal-detail.tif

Courtesy of Abrasive Technology

The level of finish that constitutes a polished surface can depend on opinion and looks. These four approximately 30× magnification images show, from left to right, sample surface finishes of 4 µin. Ra, 2 µin. Ra, 8 µin. Ra (lapped) and 8 µin. Ra (ground). 

Finish ID polishing of fuel injection components illustrates the increasing interrelation of polish process elements. According to Hitchiner, a fuel injector component made of 70-HRC nitrided steel typically would be ground with a 3mm-dia. CBN wheel applied at 100,000 to 150,000 rpm. While wheel grit sizes formerly were from 325 to 400 mesh, tighter finish requirements now dictate use of grit in the 600- to 800-mesh area. The wheels typically feature vitrified bonds so they can be dressed on the machine and thereby maximize the potential for automation.

For injectors, Hitchiner said: “20 years ago we were looking at roundness tolerances in microns and finishes around 0.25µm Ra. Now with the demand to control fuel flow for economy, we’re finding roundnesses down to more like a quarter of a micron, and surface finishes around 0.05µm Ra. The finish becomes one element of the overall tolerance. You might have 100nm of actual roundness runout, maybe 100nm of surface finish effect and 50nm runout in the 3-jaw chuck that is holding the part.” 

Tighter Ranges

Finish requirements for polished surfaces now include not only lower Ra measurements, but may also specify a range of acceptability. Troy Heuermann, business development manager, 3M Abrasive Systems Div., St. Paul, Minn., said in the past a seal surface might have had a single finish requirement of 15 µin. Ra or finer. “Now we are seeing requirements specifying a maximum and a minimum finish, between 4 and 8 µin. Ra, for example.” The lower limit is set because too smooth a finish will lack the capability to retain lubricant on the seal surface. 

Ever-tightening finish requirements sometimes present engineering and measurement challenges. “I’ve seen specifications that say we need a 1 to 2 µin. Ra finish, but there are other aspects of the specification that make it impossible to measure,” Heuermann said. 

ToolPolish.tif

Courtesy of Form Tool Technology

A finer finish in the flute area of a drill or endmill allows chips to flow easier with less friction and less heat. Better chip flow contributes to better surface finish in the machined part as well as longer tool life. These images compare a finish-ground tool (left) with a tool whose flutes have been polished (right).

Traditionally, polishing often involved applying a loose abrasive material, suspended in a compound or slurry, with a rigid disc or soft pad. “Those lapping processes can produce a mirror finish, but they are slow and part conformity also becomes an issue,” Rosier said. “Today, with tight tolerance requirements on everything, it is much more practical to use fixed abrasive in a diamond wheel to gain superior finishes. The process is more repeatable and size is easier to control.” 

In certain applications, Heuermann noted, polishing with loose abrasives in a slurry can produce subsurface damage. With hard workpiece materials such as glass or ceramics, the loose grains don’t cut a chip but simply roll on the surface of the material and wear it away. High pressure is generated at the points of the grains, and instead of cutting the workpiece material the grains may crush it and generate microcracks in the surface. Superabrasive grit fixed on a wheel or disc pad, on the other hand, makes tiny chips and can reduce or eliminate subsurface damage. 

“For some years now there has been a move away from the free lapping of flat parts to fine grinding involving planetary kinematics (simultaneous circumferential and radial relative movement of the part and wheel),” Hitchiner said. “That essentially performs the lapping process but it is 10 times faster with grinding.” 

Go With the Chip Flow

Polishes generated with superabrasives can provide benefits in machining operations. “The cutting tool industry is now talking about finish not just in terms of a specified finish on machined parts, but also on the tools themselves,” Heuermann said. “From discussions with and information from cutting tool manufacturers, we are hearing that if you can produce a better finish in the flute area of a drill or endmill, the chip material will flow easier with less friction and less heat. That is especially the case on materials like composites, aluminum, titanium, other aerospace materials and even plastics.” Better chip flow contributes to better surface finish in the part as well as longer tool life. (See “Hole in Four … or More,” by Jim Destefani in the January issue of CTE for a discussion of drilling composites that includes a reference to polished drill flutes.)

3M Trizact wheels.tif

Courtesy of 3M

Designed primarily to polish the flutes of drills and endmills, these Trizact diamond polishing wheels from 3M combine the attributes of resin-bond diamond and nonwoven abrasive wheels. The construction allows for efficient polishing while maintaining enough rigidity to be trued and dressed to consistently follow complex tool geometry, according to the company. 

Heuermann said grinding with fine-grain diamond wheels is one method to remove grinding lines generated when forming tool flutes and produce a polished surface. “The process has to remove enough material to eliminate the lines without affecting the shape of the tool,” he said. “It is a bit of challenge.” 

However, polishing with fine-grain diamond wheels can also produce part quality problems. According to Heuermann, traditional wheels use a mixture of resins and fine-grade diamond in a solid matrix. The combination can be very dense, and, in polishing operations involving minimal material removal, the wheel may rub rather than polish, creating heat. To avoid burning the tool surface, users slow the wheel speed and other grinding parameters. 

Tool flutes also can be polished manually offline, using a variety of relatively low-tech methods, such as brushes or leather wheels soaked in diamond slurry. These manual processes can be hard to control and can lead to ergonomic issues for operators. 

Both grinding with fine-grain diamond wheels and manual polishing processes are slow. As a result, Heuermann said toolmakers don’t offer a polish on many tools, and when they do the cost of reduced productivity is passed on to customers. 

To increase productivity, 3M has developed a diamond polishing wheel to primarily finish the flutes of drills and endmills. Marketed under 3M’s Trizact abrasive brand name, the wheels combine the attributes of resin-bond diamond and nonwoven abrasive wheels, Heuermann noted. The wheels’ makeup allows for efficient polishing while maintaining enough rigidity to be trued and dressed to consistently follow complex tool geometry. The 10µm-size diamond mineral is dispersed throughout the entire wheel, so fresh diamond is constantly exposed as the wheel wears. 

The wheels are for CNC grinders and enable polishing of flutes prior to finishing the cutting edge, in one setup. Regarding the surface finish generated by the wheels, Heuermann said it is difficult to measure the finish inside the flute of a tool, but when testing the wheel on part ODs, finishes were below 2 µin. Ra

Traditionally, polishing has been almost an art, and talented technicians still can produce excellent polishes manually. New technology in abrasive wheels and grinding machines “are taking some of the art out of it, but also are taking out dangers of the manual operation and worker fatigue,” Heuermann said. “By enabling end users to dial in an engineered process, we are trying to put some more science into polishing.” CTE

About the Author: Bill Kennedy, based in Latrobe, Pa., is a contributing editor for CTE. He has an extensive background as a technical writer. Contact him at (724) 537-6182 or at billk@jwr.com.

When are diamonds like lobsters? 

Global economic factors, including recovery from recession and demand from booming emerging economies, have made pricing of some industrial materials a roller coaster ride.

Tom Corcoran, president of rough diamond wholesaler Anco Industrial Diamond Corp., Shrewsbury, N.J., said prices for synthetic diamonds have “dropped about as low as they can go. The reason is that so many companies got into the business, and there is a glut of material. A wheel that was selling a decade ago for $200 you can probably pick up for $40, if they are bringing it in from China.” 

He noted that the major high-quality synthetic manufacturers provide the best-quality diamonds. “They are still made with very high technology. You get what you pay for.” 

While most of the diamond grit market is in grinding, and most diamond grit is synthetic, there is still a market for natural diamonds, mostly for use in grinding wheel dressers and cutting tools, according to Corcoran.

However, pricing in the natural diamond market is another story. Prices for rough natural diamonds “have probably doubled over the last 3 to 4 years,” Corcoran said. Diamond mining giant DeBeers reported rough diamond prices rose 27 percent in 2010 alone, topping prices before the financial crisis, driven in part by “exceptional demand” in China and India.

In addition to manufacturing, much of that demand is for jewelry, Corcoran said, noting that natural diamonds formerly considered industrial grade are now being sold as gems. Traditionally, about 90 percent of natural diamonds were used in industrial applications, compared to just 40 percent today. 

As the supply of industrial diamonds has shrunk, the price has gone up, and despite higher prices, end users do not want to pay more, Corcoran said. Facing customer resistance to price increases, the companies that make tools using natural diamonds are “stuck,” Corcoran said. “The end users have to decide whether they want quality or price, because they can’t have both.” Tools made with lower quality diamonds wear out more quickly. “The lower-quality material has stress; there’s a lot of carbon, there are cracks, the shape is off and they are much weaker,” he said. 

If pricing is prohibitive, manufacturers will find different ways of doing things to try to help the customer, Corcoran said. For example, instead of using large diamond crystals to make a dresser, the toolmaker may produce it using fine diamond grit mixed with tungsten carbide, making an impregnated dresser or multipoint dresser. 

As a growing middle class in emerging economies continues to drive demand for natural diamonds used in jewelry, pricing for industrial natural diamonds changes almost daily. Corcoran advises diamond tool manufacturers not to take blanket orders because, unless they have enough diamonds on hand to cover the order, they can’t be sure they’ll get the same quality for the same price at a later date. “It’s like ordering lobster—what’s the market price today?” Corcoran said.

—B. Kennedy

Contributors

Abrasive Technology Inc.
(740) 548-4100
www.abrasive-tech.com

American Superabrasives Corp.
Anco Industrial Diamond Corp.
(732) 389-8066
www.diamonds-abrasive.com

Saint-Gobain Abrasives
(800) 446-1119
www.nortonindustrial.com

3M Abrasive Systems Div.
(866) 279-1288, x1258
www.3m.com/abrasives

Related Glossary Terms

  • abrasive

    abrasive

    Substance used for grinding, honing, lapping, superfinishing and polishing. Examples include garnet, emery, corundum, silicon carbide, cubic boron nitride and diamond in various grit sizes.

  • burning

    burning

    Rotary tool that removes hard or soft materials similar to a rotary file. A bur’s teeth, or flutes, have a negative rake.

  • ceramics

    ceramics

    Cutting tool materials based on aluminum oxide and silicon nitride. Ceramic tools can withstand higher cutting speeds than cemented carbide tools when machining hardened steels, cast irons and high-temperature alloys.

  • chuck

    chuck

    Workholding device that affixes to a mill, lathe or drill-press spindle. It holds a tool or workpiece by one end, allowing it to be rotated. May also be fitted to the machine table to hold a workpiece. Two or more adjustable jaws actually hold the tool or part. May be actuated manually, pneumatically, hydraulically or electrically. See collet.

  • composites

    composites

    Materials composed of different elements, with one element normally embedded in another, held together by a compatible binder.

  • computer numerical control ( CNC)

    computer numerical control ( CNC)

    Microprocessor-based controller dedicated to a machine tool that permits the creation or modification of parts. Programmed numerical control activates the machine’s servos and spindle drives and controls the various machining operations. See DNC, direct numerical control; NC, numerical control.

  • cubic boron nitride ( CBN)

    cubic boron nitride ( CBN)

    Crystal manufactured from boron nitride under high pressure and temperature. Used to cut hard-to-machine ferrous and nickel-base materials up to 70 HRC. Second hardest material after diamond. See superabrasive tools.

  • dressing

    dressing

    Removal of undesirable materials from “loaded” grinding wheels using a single- or multi-point diamond or other tool. The process also exposes unused, sharp abrasive points. See loading; truing.

  • endmill

    endmill

    Milling cutter held by its shank that cuts on its periphery and, if so configured, on its free end. Takes a variety of shapes (single- and double-end, roughing, ballnose and cup-end) and sizes (stub, medium, long and extra-long). Also comes with differing numbers of flutes.

  • fatigue

    fatigue

    Phenomenon leading to fracture under repeated or fluctuating stresses having a maximum value less than the tensile strength of the material. Fatigue fractures are progressive, beginning as minute cracks that grow under the action of the fluctuating stress.

  • flat ( screw flat)

    flat ( screw flat)

    Flat surface machined into the shank of a cutting tool for enhanced holding of the tool.

  • flutes

    flutes

    Grooves and spaces in the body of a tool that permit chip removal from, and cutting-fluid application to, the point of cut.

  • grinding

    grinding

    Machining operation in which material is removed from the workpiece by a powered abrasive wheel, stone, belt, paste, sheet, compound, slurry, etc. Takes various forms: surface grinding (creates flat and/or squared surfaces); cylindrical grinding (for external cylindrical and tapered shapes, fillets, undercuts, etc.); centerless grinding; chamfering; thread and form grinding; tool and cutter grinding; offhand grinding; lapping and polishing (grinding with extremely fine grits to create ultrasmooth surfaces); honing; and disc grinding.

  • grinding machine

    grinding machine

    Powers a grinding wheel or other abrasive tool for the purpose of removing metal and finishing workpieces to close tolerances. Provides smooth, square, parallel and accurate workpiece surfaces. When ultrasmooth surfaces and finishes on the order of microns are required, lapping and honing machines (precision grinders that run abrasives with extremely fine, uniform grits) are used. In its “finishing” role, the grinder is perhaps the most widely used machine tool. Various styles are available: bench and pedestal grinders for sharpening lathe bits and drills; surface grinders for producing square, parallel, smooth and accurate parts; cylindrical and centerless grinders; center-hole grinders; form grinders; facemill and endmill grinders; gear-cutting grinders; jig grinders; abrasive belt (backstand, swing-frame, belt-roll) grinders; tool and cutter grinders for sharpening and resharpening cutting tools; carbide grinders; hand-held die grinders; and abrasive cutoff saws.

  • grinding wheel

    grinding wheel

    Wheel formed from abrasive material mixed in a suitable matrix. Takes a variety of shapes but falls into two basic categories: one that cuts on its periphery, as in reciprocating grinding, and one that cuts on its side or face, as in tool and cutter grinding.

  • inner diameter ( ID)

    inner diameter ( ID)

    Dimension that defines the inside diameter of a cavity or hole. See OD, outer diameter.

  • lapping

    lapping

    Finishing operation in which a loose, fine-grain abrasive in a liquid medium abrades material. Extremely accurate process that corrects minor shape imperfections, refines surface finishes and produces a close fit between mating surfaces.

  • micron

    micron

    Measure of length that is equal to one-millionth of a meter.

  • polishing

    polishing

    Abrasive process that improves surface finish and blends contours. Abrasive particles attached to a flexible backing abrade the workpiece.

  • recovery

    recovery

    Reduction or removal of workhardening effects, without motion of large-angle grain boundaries.

  • stiffness

    stiffness

    1. Ability of a material or part to resist elastic deflection. 2. The rate of stress with respect to strain; the greater the stress required to produce a given strain, the stiffer the material is said to be. See dynamic stiffness; static stiffness.

  • tolerance

    tolerance

    Minimum and maximum amount a workpiece dimension is allowed to vary from a set standard and still be acceptable.

  • truing

    truing

    Using a diamond or other dressing tool to ensure that a grinding wheel is round and concentric and will not vibrate at required speeds. Weights also are used to balance the wheel. Also performed to impart a contour to the wheel’s face. See dressing.

  • tungsten carbide ( WC)

    tungsten carbide ( WC)

    Intermetallic compound consisting of equal parts, by atomic weight, of tungsten and carbon. Sometimes tungsten carbide is used in reference to the cemented tungsten carbide material with cobalt added and/or with titanium carbide or tantalum carbide added. Thus, the tungsten carbide may be used to refer to pure tungsten carbide as well as co-bonded tungsten carbide, which may or may not contain added titanium carbide and/or tantalum carbide.