Abrasive Waterjet Machining
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. AWJ System
- UHP pumps are the most upstream component in a waterjet system, where the water enters the pump at ambient pressure and exits the pump into the plumbing system at higher pressure. UHP plumbing is used to transport the pressurized water to the jet-forming nozzle. This plumbing system may consist of tubing, hoses, fittings, swivel joints, and rotary swivels. Pump operating pressures have increased over time, from 200 MPa in the 1980s to over 600 MPa at present.
- It is important that the high-pressure UHP transmission line tubing is of high strength, is flexible in some areas, and does not cause a significant drop in pressure.
- The waterjet’s on/off valve is a critical component, and is naturally closed. Pneumatic actuators are used to open the valve. The response time to the open and close commands is about 100–200 milliseconds, and needs to be faster for some high-speed cutting applications, such as cutting food.
- The cutting head is downstream of the on/off valve and is where the pressure energy is converted to kinetic energy. Special orifices are used to form the waterjets. In AWJ technology, the cutting head design is also important to ensure an optimally sized mixing chamber, no vacuum leaks, a smooth entry for the abrasives, and a concentrically aligned mixing tube.
- For abrasive feeds and metering, the abrasives are placed in a relatively large hopper and fed using pneumatic pressure to a local hopper mounted on the machine; this local hopper also serves as a metering device for the abrasive flow rate.
- The motion system is used to manipulate the cutting head (or the workpiece) to affect the cutting process when the jet interacts with the material. These motion systems are most commonly of a gantry or cantilever architecture, and may range from one to five axes of motion. PC-based CNC controllers are typically used to control the interpolating motion of the machine. A robotic arm system is also used as a manipulator.
- The software is used to enable operators to interface with the machine controller. Models that relate jet parameters to cutting results are used in the front end of the software to aid in identifying the motion kinematics in a transparent way to the operator whose concern may be limited to the CAD portion of the software, such as path planning and nesting.
- Catcher tanks are used for shape cutting, while point catchers are used for trimming the edge of a part. The catcher needs to be cleaned either periodically or continuously.
- Other system components that have been used include enclosures, waste removal systems, abrasive recyclers, water chillers for recycling, special fixtures, and a wide range of sensors.
3. AWJ Process
3.1. Tool Description and Parameters
3.2. AWJ Tool Characteristics
3.2.1. Water: Orifices and Flow Parameters
3.2.2. Abrasives
- Hardness: A common relative scale for hardness is the Mohs’ hardness scale, which ranges from 1 to 10, with 1 being the softest (talc) and 10 being the hardest (diamond).
- Specific gravity: The specific gravity is a relevant property for momentum transfer, acceleration, and cutting. Heavier abrasives will not be easily deflected off the material by water flowing over the cut surface.
- Size: For particle size, the US Sieve Series and Tyler Standard Sieve Series are used to classify abrasives. The most common mesh opening sizes for these scales are given in Table 1, and provide an indication of particle sizes. The abrasive particle size affects both the flowability and the cutting results. Fine abrasives do not flow well in abrasive feed lines; thus, lines may plug, and they may not be as effective in cutting.
- Shape: The abrasive particle shape can be characterized by a few parameters, such as the sphericity and roundness, which are the most commonly known indices; see Figure 6 for a visualization. The sphericity expresses the degree to which a particle approaches a spherical shape. The roundness refers to the sharpness of the corners and the edges of an abrasive particle. For AWJ cutting, the preferred abrasives are those of a high sphericity and low roundness index.
- Frangibility: This expresses the ease of breaking and crumbling. For example, an old chocolate chip cookie is more frangible than a fresh one. Frangibility is related to the toughness of a material.
Abrasive | Specific Gravity | Hardness | Rough Relative Cost | Roundness | Sphericity | Frangibility Level (*) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Knoop | Moh | ||||||
Garnet | 3.4–4.3 | 1350 | 7.5 | 1 | 0.45 | 0.78 | medium |
Aluminum Oxide | 3.95–4.0 | 2100 | 9 | 4–6 | 0.35 | 0.78 | medium |
Silicon carbide | 3.2 | 2500 | 9.2 | 3–4 | 0.31 | 0.75 | medium |
Chilled iron | 7 | 520 | 6 | 4–5 | 0.5 | 0.8 | medium |
Steel grit | 7 | 500 | 5 | 5–7 | 0.52 | 0.82 | low |
Steel shot | 7 | 460 | 5 | 4–6 | 0.89 | 0.93 | low |
Copper slag | 2.8–3.8 | 1050 | 7 | 0.5 | 0.5 | 0.78 | high |
Silica sand | 2.2–2.65 | 700 | 7 | 0.5 | 0.57 | 0.79 | high |
olivine | 3.2–4.5 | 1100 | 6.5 | 0.75–1 | 0.6 | 0.82 | high |
Staurolite | 3.7–3.8 | 1275 | 7.5 | 0.6–0.7 | 0.46 | 0.79 | medium |
Glass beads | 2.5 | 700 | 5.5 | 1.5–2 | 0.95 | 0.95 | high |
Tungsten carbide | 14.92 | 1870 | 7–10 | 0.47 | 0.77 | low |
3.2.3. Water–Abrasive Mixing
3.2.4. Air Entrainment
3.2.5. Mixing Tube Wear
4. Cutting Observations
4.1. Geometrical Attributes
- Bow: A bow or curvature is observed when cutting thick materials at relatively slow speeds. The shape of the kerf takes the shape of the jet.
- Burr: A cut burr is observed at the bottom surface of a cut, especially for relatively thin and ductile materials such as steel and its high-strength alloys. Instead of cutting through, the jet hydrodynamic force causes bending and deformation, manifesting as burrs.
- Top edge rounding: Top edge rounding occurs when cutting at relatively large standoff distances.
4.2. Integrity Attributes
- Embedding: It has been observed that embedding occurs on cut surfaces, and the size of the embedded particle can range from one-hundredth to one-tenth of the original particle size. For example, SEM observations showed a 1- to 15-micron embedded particle size range when 150-micron abrasives were used. The measurements showed that approximately 0.02% of the surface area may contain embedded particles. The use of plain waterjets to clean an AWJ-cut surface dramatically reduced the number of embedded abrasives to almost 0% [31]. Several companies, such as Boeing, confirmed that the degree of particle embedding does not affect the weldability or the fatigue life of the parts. On the contrary, AWJ-cut surfaces showed favorable peening effects and thus improvement in fatigue life [32,33].
- Chipping: Edge chipping occurs when cutting brittle materials such as glass, sapphire, and amorphous metal. The size of the chips is proportional to the grit size.
- Delamination: This may occur in laminated materials or composites. When the jet is not cutting through with enough momentum and above a certain critical rate, a relatively high hydrodynamic force will be exerted on the face or the step being cut. This causes the jet to spread sideways, inducing layer separation.
- Frosting and rounding: Top surface edge frosting and rounding may occur due to increased standoff distances as some abrasives on the fringe of the jet cause pitting instead of cutting [31]. The width of this pitted (and rounded) zone increases as the standoff distance increases. Cutting at a shorter standoff distance may eliminate this zone, especially when the mixing tube has a high aspect ratio (~100). Cutting underwater may also eliminate this zone, resulting in sharp cut edges free from pitting. A tube shroud used to flow low-pressure water around the jet, simulating underwater cutting, proved effective in eliminating the frosting or hazing.
4.3. Cutting Mechanics
4.3.1. Micromechanics (Erosion)
4.3.2. Macromechanics (Depth of Cut)
4.4. Surface Finish
4.4.1. Surface Waviness
4.4.2. Surface Roughness
4.5. Trail-Back
4.6. Taper
4.7. Cutting Strategy with Trailback, Taper, and Surface Waviness
5. Industries and Applications
- shape cutting;
- trimming;
- slicing and turning;
- milling and grooving;
- hole making;
- near-net shaping;
- surface modification.
5.1. Jet Engines
5.2. Aircraft
- higher cutting speeds than routers;
- no distortion due to limited jet forces and the nature of micromachining action;
- no heat-affected zones;
- no delamination, splintering, fraying edges, or any other integrity problems;
- no subsequent processes are needed;
- reduced fixturing and tooling;
- process automation and multiple operations are possible;
- no dust;
- versatile for different composites and laminated structures.
5.3. Micro Electronics
- AWJ kerf width reduction to the 130-micron range;
- achieve surface finish in the 10-micron range;
- pure waterjet dicing of PCBs;
- high-accuracy milling of glass and sapphire to less than a 10-micron surface finish;
- pure waterjet trimming of composites without delamination.
- Some of these advances will be discussed in later sections.
5.4. Glass and Optics
5.5. Stone and Tile
5.6. Military
5.7. Automotive
6. AWJ Machining Processes
6.1. Shape Cutting
- kerf width compensation;
- terrain following;
- vision-assisted cutting;
- first article compensation;
- kerf taper compensation;
- corner geometry compensation;
- three-dimensional wrist with SOD sensor.
6.1.1. Thin Materials
Thin Sheet Metal
Vent Screens
Solar Glass
Display Glass
MicroSD Singulation
Vision-Assisted Catalyst Slotting
6.1.2. Thick Materials
- Process Issues: The AWJ process parameters should be selected to cut the required depth at the required speed and surface quality. A special AWJ cutting head may be needed to maximize the kinetic power of the abrasives, and also to collimate the AWJ beam to focus this power.
- Kinematic Issues: It has been found that angulating the jet with taper and lead angles is critical for obtaining accurate parts. This kinematic manipulation corrects for process physical phenomena, namely, kerf taper and trailback.
Kinematic Manipulation
Process Parameters
Thick Glass Cutting
Thick Titanium Cutting (Shaping)
6.2. Edge Trimming (Composites)
6.2.1. Composite Stringer Trimming
6.2.2. Wing Skin and Fuselage Trimming
6.2.3. Robotic Clip Trimming
6.2.4. Fan Blade Trimming
6.3. Cutting Hard Materials
6.4. Micro AWJ Cutting
6.5. Drilling
6.5.1. Metal
6.5.2. Brittle, Coated, and Laminated Materials
Glass
TBC
- Vacuum assistance: The use of vacuum assistance was found to be vital in bringing the abrasives to the mixing chamber before firing the waterjet. This prevents chipping and cracking.
- Pressure and orifice size: Both the pressure and orifice size need to be minimized, as excess water will result in chipping and spalling. Reduced pressure will reduce the stagnation pressure, which also reduces the probability of chipping.
- Rotate while piercing: This is important when drilling at very shallow angles, such as below 25 degrees to the surface. In this case, the jet starts at a larger angle, either perpendicular or near perpendicular, and starts piercing while rotating to the final angle. The concept is to engage the jet with the metal substrate so as to prevent its rebound off the interface.
- Dwell time: The dwell time corrects for the shape of the hole, and will also remove defects at or near the exit side.
- Standoff distance: Reducing the standoff distance will reduce edge rounding at the entry. However, edge rounding is a desired feature in some cases.
- Mixing tube length: Increasing the mixing tube length will collimate the jet more and prevents hole enlargement at the entrance.
- Microphone detection: A microphone may be used to detect the jet breakthrough. This is important to control the hole shape by adding the proper dwell time.
Composites and Laminates
6.5.3. Shaped Holes (Shaped Mixing Tubes)
6.5.4. Gun Drilling (Boring)
6.5.5. Drilling Model
6.6. Milling
6.6.1. AWJ Milling Process
- Liner Milling: In this method, Cartesian motion is used to scan the jet over the masked workpiece.
- Radial Milling: The jet moves radially over masked workpieces mounted on a rotating platter. The platter itself or a dome may be the workpiece in this case.
- Cylindrical Milling: Controlled depth milling can be achieved on both the outside and the inside of a drum on which workpieces are mounted.
6.6.2. Milling of Metallic Isogrid Structures
6.6.3. Milling of Gamma Ti-Al Heat Tiles
6.6.4. Milling of Glass Telescope Face Sheets
6.6.5. Deep Milling
6.6.6. Composite Repair
6.7. Grooving
Milling Model
6.8. Turning
6.8.1. Turning Operations
6.8.2. Turning Models
6.8.3. Segmental Turning
6.9. Near-Net Shaping
6.10. Surface Modification
6.11. 690 MPa Pure Waterjet Cutting
6.12. Hybrid Machining
6.13. Cryogenic Jets
7. New Trends
7.1. Predictive Maintenance (IoT and AI)
7.2. Precision and Quality Improvements (ML and AI)
7.3. Real-Time Processing Optimization
7.4. Remote Monitoring and Control (IoT and AI)
7.5. Waste Reduction and Environment Control
8. Final Remarks
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
Ah | Cross-sectional area of hose | Qmax | Maximum air flow rate |
Orifice cross-sectional area | r | Abrasive loading ratio | |
Coefficient of discharge | Radia velocity | ||
CD | Drag coefficient | R | Ratio of Xc/dn |
dh | Hose diameter | Rw | Waviness |
dm | Mixing tube diameter | sa | Abrasive particle-specific gravity |
dn | Orifice diameter | t | Time |
dp | Particle diameter | tb | Trailback |
Ew | Jet hydraulic power | u | Material displacement rate |
Ea | Abrasive kinetic power | Va | Abrasive particle velocity |
Ewd | Waterjet power density | Vw | Waterjet velocity |
f | Flow friction coefficient | X | Distance along the jet |
h | Cutting depth | Xc | Jet initial zone length |
hc | Depth due to cutting wear | x | Distance along the mixing tube length |
hd | Depth due to deformation wear | w | Jet width in the main region |
lm | Mixing tube length | λ | Particle velocity ratio |
Abrasive flow rate | μ | Abrasive–solid friction coefficient | |
Water flow rate | Abrasive velocity ratio | ||
Pressure | Water density | ||
Pa | Ambient pressure | Abrasive power efficiency | |
Pr | Pressure ratio (Pa − Pv)/Pa | σf | Material strength property |
Pv | Vacuum (or suction) pressure | Momentum transfer efficiency | |
Q | Water flow rate |
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Mesh No. | 0.1 | 0.12 | 0.15 | 0.2 | 0.25 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
dp (mm) | Mixing Tube Length, lm (mm) | |||||
16 | 1.65 | 439 | 423 | 401 | 369 | 340 |
36 | 0.76 | 202 | 195 | 185 | 170 | 157 |
60 | 0.38 | 101 | 98 | 93 | 85 | 78 |
80 | 0.25 | 67 | 65 | 62 | 57 | 52 |
100 | 0.13 | 34 | 33 | 31 | 28 | 26 |
Material | Thickness (mm) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.8 | 1.6 | 3.2 | 6.4 | 12.7 | 19.1 | 50.8 | |
Toughened zirconia | 0.9 | 0.7 | 0.4 | 0.3 | |||
Dense zirconia | 0.8 | 0.7 | |||||
SiC fiber in SiC | 1.1 | 0.6 | 0.5 | ||||
ZrO2-MgO | 0.8 | 0.7 | |||||
Al2O3/CoCrAly [80%/20%] | 1.0 | 0.7 | |||||
Al2O3/CoCrAly [60%/40%] | 1.0 | 0.7 | |||||
C-glass | 100.0 | 90.0 | 80.0 | 60.5 | 40.0 | 20.0 | 6.0 |
Al2O3/SiC [7.5%] | 2.7 | 1.4 | |||||
SiC/TiB2 [15%] | 0.3 | 0.2 |
Material | Thickness or Depth | Width | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Top | Bottom | Wall Taper | ||
mm | mm | mm | Degree | |
US Synthetic Carbide/PCD (*) | 9.53 | 1.09 | 0.58 | 1.53 |
ROCTEC 500 plate (WC composite) | 7.49 | 1.70 | 0.58 | 4.27 |
Whisker-Reinforced Ceramic | 7.11 | 1.85 | 0.74 | 4.49 |
Al2O3 + TiC blank | 6.10 | 2.03 | 0.91 | 5.24 |
WC w/10% Cobalt Binder Blank | 5.08 | 2.03 | 0.74 | 7.27 |
AMALOX 87 Alumina Ceramic | 6.35 | 2.24 | 1.17 | 4.80 |
AMZIROX 86 HIPed Zirconia Ceramic | 6.35 | 2.31 | 0.91 | 6.28 |
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Hashish, M. Abrasive Waterjet Machining. Materials 2024, 17, 3273. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133273
Hashish M. Abrasive Waterjet Machining. Materials. 2024; 17(13):3273. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133273
Chicago/Turabian StyleHashish, Mohamed. 2024. "Abrasive Waterjet Machining" Materials 17, no. 13: 3273. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133273
APA StyleHashish, M. (2024). Abrasive Waterjet Machining. Materials, 17(13), 3273. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17133273