Aerospace: Taking flight

Author Alan Richter
Published
October 10, 2023 - 03:00am

Mission-critical aerospace components, such as engine and landing gear parts, turbines and blisks, must be made from materials that can withstand extreme temperature and stress. Those workpiece materials include heat-resistant superalloys and titanium alloys, whose composition and properties make them effective for demanding applications but also create challenges when machining them.

One requirement when machining superalloys and titanium is adequately pulling heat from the cutting zone, said Bill Durow, manager of global engineering for aerospace at Sandvik Coromant Co. in Mebane, North Carolina.

High-pressure coolant helps achieve that need because just applying a stream of coolant or flooding the zone with coolant is insufficient. Creating a parallel hydrolaminar flow with high-speed, high-pressure coolant also can assist with chip formation, said Brent Godfrey, machine integration product specialist at Sandvik Coromant.

“When the coolant nozzle is positioned correctly on the cutting tool,” he said, “you can get the flow of coolant to act almost like a power wedge to curl the chip and help to mechanically break the chip in some materials. In materials like titanium, you can effectively break chips with high-pressure coolant, which is a good problem-solver on those materials.”

Machining aerospace materials can be difficult, but tools and techniques are available to help.
Machining aerospace materials can be difficult, but tools and techniques are available to help. Image courtesy of Sandvik Coromant

The minimum pressure on a standard high-pressure pump on many machine tools is about 69 bar (1,000 psi), Godfrey said, but pumps are available, such as on some vertical lathes, that go to 172 to 207 bar (2,500 to 3,000 psi).

The tool manufacturer reports that when it developed the first version of the Jetbreak high-pressure coolant system several decades ago, the Coromant Capto modular quick-change tooling system was the basis for that development and was designed with an internal coolant supply for pressures up to 138 bar (2,000 psi). Coromant Capto is a machine tool interface with a tapered polygon design that transmits torque.

Godfrey explained that Capto’s self-centering coupling proves beneficial when machining aerospace materials.

“You just mount it into the tooling block and align the polygon to the other polygon that’s in the tooling block,” he said, “and the clamping unit and cutting edge is on center right away.”

Durow added that the high level of repeatability for the modular quick-change system is essential for efficiently machining aerospace parts.

“Just taking the tool out, for instance, is an easy plug-in place for customers,” he said, “especially when they deal with highly critical, highly valuable components.”

Another major benefit of the modular system is that it provides a significant amount of pull force on the cutting tool, Godfrey said, noting that a Capto tool has a ground contact face and the polygon to provide two methods of contact for the coupling.

“It translates to very high rigidity, very high strength, very good bending stiffness of the cutting tool,” he said.

Cutting tool geometries, including a positive cutting geometry and a comparatively open chipbreaker on indexable inserts, play a substantial role when machining exotic metals for aerospace parts.

“We have geometries specific for aerospace materials with special chipbreakers on them that are also designed to handle the high-pressure coolant,” Godfrey said.

In addition, Durow said the toolmaker designs the insert top geometry expressly for aerospace materials.

“It has to be free cutting, but it also has to be strong enough to not break when it starts cutting the material,” he said. “You need a good balance.”

Material Movement

The introduction of different workpiece materials adds to the challenge of machining aerospace parts. For example, Durow said although they are not new materials, more parts for the hot section of aircraft are being made from single-crystal nickel-base superalloys, which provide enhanced microstructure thermal stability and improved mechanical properties.

Besides being difficult to machine, many aerospace materials, especially for spacecraft applications, are proprietary alloys that cannot be purchased from a local supplier to test tools and run trials, he said. Even the forging and casting companies that produce the materials are restricted from selling them to entities that lack certain contract agreements. Instead, Sandvik Coromant must develop partnerships with the aerospace part manufacturers to obtain the metals.

“Today,” Durow said, “there’s a lot of R&D going into these materials, so we’re seeing more optimized solutions.”

An illustration shows a CoroDrill 860 tool drilling a hole in an aerospace valve.
An illustration shows a CoroDrill 860 tool drilling a hole in an aerospace valve. Image courtesy of Sandvik Coromant

In addition to workpiece materials, he said cutting tool materials other than carbide are being used more to machine aerospace parts. Ceramic and polycrystalline diamond inserts can extend tool life, boost productivity or both. For example, while carbide inserts typically can run at a cutting speed of 45.7 m/min. (150 sfm) or less when machining heat-resistant superalloys, ceramic inserts can run from 213.4 to even 304.8 m/min. (700 to 1,000 sfm).

How a cutting tool is applied also influences tool life and productivity. For instance, Godfrey recommends against burying a cutter when machining nickel-base superalloys.

“We like to take a light and fast approach,” he said. “The more you bury your cutter into a cut, (it) creates more of what we call a heat propagation area — the area where heat could build up.”

“We’ve been preaching about lightning-fast, dynamic toolpaths, trochoidal machining, adaptive machining, light radial cuts and sweeping across the part instead of burying a cutter,” Durow concurred.

However, changing a machining process for an aerospace component can be difficult because of industry regulations.

“Any part that’s going to be dynamic, that’s essentially moving, is typically considered critical,” Godfrey said. “And unless they’re going to do a lot of paperwork and a lot of cutups and trials, they don’t want to change anything.”

He said some processes and tooling for components were certified decades ago and aerospace part manufacturers still are not allowed to change anything, even though cutting tool technology has improved significantly.

“Ever since I started with the company, it’s been a problem with these critical components,” said Godfrey, who has been with the toolmaker for 24 years.

However, he said change is happening, albeit slowly, as manufacturers cannot keep up with the demand for airplane engines and other components and want to increase production.

“Times are changing,” Godfrey said, “so it’s good.”


For more information about Sandvik Coromant, call 800-726-3845 or visit www.sandvik.coromant.com. 

Related Glossary Terms

  • alloys

    alloys

    Substances having metallic properties and being composed of two or more chemical elements of which at least one is a metal.

  • chipbreaker

    chipbreaker

    Groove or other tool geometry that breaks chips into small fragments as they come off the workpiece. Designed to prevent chips from becoming so long that they are difficult to control, catch in turning parts and cause safety problems.

  • coolant

    coolant

    Fluid that reduces temperature buildup at the tool/workpiece interface during machining. Normally takes the form of a liquid such as soluble or chemical mixtures (semisynthetic, synthetic) but can be pressurized air or other gas. Because of water’s ability to absorb great quantities of heat, it is widely used as a coolant and vehicle for various cutting compounds, with the water-to-compound ratio varying with the machining task. See cutting fluid; semisynthetic cutting fluid; soluble-oil cutting fluid; synthetic cutting fluid.

  • cutting speed

    cutting speed

    Tangential velocity on the surface of the tool or workpiece at the cutting interface. The formula for cutting speed (sfm) is tool diameter 5 0.26 5 spindle speed (rpm). The formula for feed per tooth (fpt) is table feed (ipm)/number of flutes/spindle speed (rpm). The formula for spindle speed (rpm) is cutting speed (sfm) 5 3.82/tool diameter. The formula for table feed (ipm) is feed per tooth (ftp) 5 number of tool flutes 5 spindle speed (rpm).

  • cutting tool materials

    cutting tool materials

    Cutting tool materials include cemented carbides, ceramics, cermets, polycrystalline diamond, polycrystalline cubic boron nitride, some grades of tool steels and high-speed steels. See HSS, high-speed steels; PCBN, polycrystalline cubic boron nitride; PCD, polycrystalline diamond.

  • mechanical properties

    mechanical properties

    Properties of a material that reveal its elastic and inelastic behavior when force is applied, thereby indicating its suitability for mechanical applications; for example, modulus of elasticity, tensile strength, elongation, hardness and fatigue limit.

  • microstructure

    microstructure

    Structure of a metal as revealed by microscopic examination of the etched surface of a polished specimen.

  • parallel

    parallel

    Strip or block of precision-ground stock used to elevate a workpiece, while keeping it parallel to the worktable, to prevent cutter/table contact.

  • polycrystalline diamond ( PCD)

    polycrystalline diamond ( PCD)

    Cutting tool material consisting of natural or synthetic diamond crystals bonded together under high pressure at elevated temperatures. PCD is available as a tip brazed to a carbide insert carrier. Used for machining nonferrous alloys and nonmetallic materials at high cutting speeds.

  • 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.

  • superalloys

    superalloys

    Tough, difficult-to-machine alloys; includes Hastelloy, Inconel and Monel. Many are nickel-base metals.

Author

Editor-at-large

Alan holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Including his 20 years at CTE, Alan has more than 30 years of trade journalism experience.