1. Introduction
Surface texture, which can be in many forms (i.e., tiny scratches, grooved structures produced by machining, etc.), is gradually gaining greater magnitude in the field of surface engineering [
1].
Laser profilometry is one of the most recently developed approaches for surface roughness measurements, whilst pulsed thermography was used with the intention of associating the influence of surface roughness with thermal radiometry [
2].
Interrupted laser microscopy and profilometry measurements of the friction surface show four evolution stages of the powder boundary layer development: localized formation, complete formation, local spalling, and large scuffing of the boundary layer [
3].
The surface-emergent relief is not only the bearer of individual pieces of information, but also an image of the technology used to create it in the first place [
4,
5]. By evaluating the roughness parameters, it is possible to predict the sequence of operations required to achieve the desired surface quality and also to optimize the process of its creation [
6].
Surface roughness is a parameter that often crops up in metal working processes. It is one of many factors that represent the quality of machining, which impacts productivity gains. From a mechanical oscillation point of view, various degrees of roughness are undesirable because they cause noise and dynamic strain [
7,
8]. These result in fatigue and failure of the machine structure or its functional parts and a loss of energy or reduced performance. A chronological overview of optical profilometric systems, which are described as carrying out real time acquisition, digital signal processing and full-color 3D profile displays, have been introduced. The relevant operating principles, strengths and weaknesses of these devices have been discussed and discussions on major limitations and future challenges in high-speed optical profilometry have been accounted for [
9,
10].
Models describing the relationship between the machine and the workpiece and the surface quality of the latter began to appear in published papers several years ago. Z. Cojbasic, Petkovic, Shamshirband, Tong, Ch, Jankovic, Ducic, Baralic [
11] defined several aspects of importance of the experimental analysis of surface roughness in the machining process. Unwanted surface roughness may indicate damage to functional parts of the machine, wear of tools, of the workpiece, the cutting head or other parts of the machine. These findings herald damage to, or lack of rigidity of the machine’s structure, bearing components or the machine’s other machining and separating parts [
11].
Jeyapoovan and Murugan [
12] have stated that the development of science and technology, and the application of the results of such developments, increase the importance of surface quality of parts. This largely affects their service life and reliability, and the operating accuracy, noise, corrosion and wear resistance, fatigue loss, or fatigue strength of components are largely quality-dependent [
13,
14]. The roughness value of surfaces that come into contact with each other is often a decisive factor [
15]. It also significantly impacts the life, reliability and the operation of the technical equipment [
16,
17]. Liu, Lu, Yi, Wang and Ao [
18] proposed a similar surface roughness measurement method to prove that the measurement process is largely influenced by the source of the laser light containing two colors, red and green, creating a relationship model between the overlapping index and roughness.
The work of C. Kang, H.X. Liu [
19] and C. Lu [
20] demonstrates that the surface profile and the workpiece surface roughness are the most important product quality characteristics, and, in most cases, they reflect important technical requirements for engineering components. Achieving the required surface quality is very important for the functional behavior of the part. In addition, the importance of the machined surface quality is constantly increasing, as are the demands placed on such surfaces [
21,
22]. Roughness represents the height of the unevenness as compared to the perfect and ideally smooth surface and emerges as a consequence of the work of a tool deployed [
23] in machining and finishing [
24]. The evaluated parameters were
Ra, the mean arithmetic deviation of the examined profile, and
Rz, the greatest height of the profile unevenness. The very first advantage of surface diagnostics by laser profilometry (LPM) (
Figure 1) is that it also evaluates other surface characteristics such as
Rp—the height of the largest profile projection,
Rq—the mean quadratic deviation of the examined profile and
Rv—the depth of the largest profile depression. These values are able to tell us more about the character of individual parts of the surface [
25].
A fast surface profiling algorithm based on white light interferometry was designed using the sampling theory that was installed in the commercial system to reach the world’s highest scanning speed of 80 microns per second. The resolution of the system height is in the order of 10 nm for a measuring range greater than 100 microns [
26,
27].
The goals of the paper were postulated after careful review of the literature. The main objective of the experiment was to measure aluminum and stainless-steel samples using a laser profilometer and a contact roughness meter and to determine the effect the type of material had on the cutting speed. Data from the experimental measurements were processed into graphical dependencies and evaluated at the end of the paper. Another objective was to compare the measurement methods of the laser profilometer and the Mitutoyo SJ 400 roughness meter. The practical benefit of the experiment is, based on the analysis of the sample surfaces, the insight into whether the cutting machine is operating properly without any signs of impending failure. Comparing methods enabled us to determine their advantages and disadvantages, described at the end of the paper.
2. Methodology of the Research
The experiments carried out were aimed at monitoring differences in surface quality of different types of materials produced under the same material separation conditions, but with the cutting head speed adapted to the required roughness and material stiffness. Examined samples were made of aluminum and stainless steel and measured by contactless and contact methods. In the application of both methods, the sites of measurement were the same. The samples were measured and evaluated with the laser profilometer (contactless LPM, 2015, KVANT spol. s.r.o., Slovakia) and the Mitutoyo roughness tester (contact test, SJ400, Japan).
2.1. Preparation of Samples and Description of Tested Materials
Cutting device (AWJ, WJ4020 1Z-C0-PJ60 COBRA, PTV Prague was used, together with a PTV56-60 high pressure pump from FLOW SYSTEMS in
Figure 2) was used for cutting samples at DRC, s.r.o. in Prešov.
In
Table 1 are listed technical parameters of the equipment used for preparation of experimental samples.
Analyzed materials were chosen on the base of the two basic requirements:
Sample (nomenclature) marking:
SS050—Stainless steel—cutting head feed rate (50 mm·min−1)
SS120—Stainless steel—cutting head feed rate (120 mm·min−1)
SS150—Stainless steel—cutting head feed rate (150 mm·min−1)
AL120—Aluminum—cutting head feed rate (120 mm·min−1)
AL220—Aluminum—cutting head feed rate (220 mm·min−1)
AL370—Aluminum—cutting head feed rate (370 mm·min−1)
Six samples were produced by the AWJ method (
Figure 3). Three samples (AL120, AL220, AL370) were made of aluminum and three samples (SS050, SS150, SS150) were of stainless steel (SS—Stainless steel). For each sample, a different feed rate of the cutting head was used.
For waterjet cutting, the company declares certain surface roughness to be achieved at different feed rates. The declared surface roughness values under different feed rates of the cutting head are shown in
Table 2.
Table 3 shows the parameters set for the AWJ cutting, constant for all samples in contrast to the varying speed rates of the cutting head.
2.2. Surface Measurement by Contactless Method
The laser profilometer assembly (
Figure 4) consists of basic and complementary parts. The basic parts include the support frame from components with vertical positioning of the measuring head and the programmable sample feed in the X and Y axes, the laser beam source, the lens and a CMOS (Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor) sensor camera. Additional parts include a computer with service and evaluation software and an image splitter.
The optical part of the system consists of the AVT Marlin 131B camera and the Tamron 23FM50SP 50 mm lens with a visible area of 22 mm × 7 mm. The automated sample feed in the X and Y axes is achieved with the Standa 8MT160-300 stepper motors, up to a maximum of 300 mm in each axis. The system enables measurement of samples weighing no more than 8 kg with a positioning accuracy of 2.5 micrometers per step, each step consisting of 8 micrometers. The sensor resolution is 0.02 mm/pixel.
To eliminate the impact of vibrations on the measurement and on the quality of the measured data, the samples on the LPM worktop were placed in the plasticine.
Using the experimental system, it is possible to measure and evaluate the surface roughness parameters of samples according to ISO 11562 (Rq, Rv, Rz, Ra, Rp). The results of measured profile evaluation can be exported in csv format, suitable for further processing of experiments in the form of raw data.
The image splitter Matrox TripleHead2Go-Digital Edition delivers crisp processing and evaluation of the measured data images. This device serves the purpose of splitting one graphic output from the computer into three independent graphic outputs, and in combination with the use of another graphic output and the choice of an extended desktop, four independent images can be obtained by having a different part of the desktop on each monitor.
The Main Principle of the System
The system employs laser profilometry through a so-called triangulation principle (
Figure 5), in which a laser line is projected onto the measured surface under a certain angle, which is subsequently scanned by a digital camera placed perpendicularly above the scanned surface.
2.3. Surface Measurement by Contact Method
As mentioned earlier in the introduction, for the verification and comparison of the measured values, the measurement of the samples was also carried out on the Mitutoyo SJ400 contact roughness tester (
Figure 6 and
Figure 7). The technical parameters of the contact roughness tester are shown in the
Table 4.
The same part of the measured surface was selected for each sample in both methods of measurement. The sample materials were defined as EN5083 (aluminum) and X5CrNi18-10 (A304 austenitic stainless steel) by the respective standard.
2.4. Experimental Sample Measurement
Quality measurement in terms of roughness was performed on two types of materials. The measured samples were of the same thickness and were made at different feed rates. Three samples were made from each material.
The Measurement Site of the Ra and Rz Parameters by the Laser Profilometer and Mitutoyo SJ 400
The workpiece surface quality values were measured with a laser profilometer on each workpiece in ten surface depths (
Figure 8 right side). Namely at depths of 0.11; 2.31; 4.51; 6.71; 8.91; 11.11; 13.31; 15.51; 17.71; 19.91 mm. Material depths were the same for both measurement methods and materials.
The surface quality of the workpiece was measured by the Mitutoyo SJ 400 at four depths of the sample (
Figure 8 left side). Namely at the depths of 0.11; 6.71; 13.31; 19.91 mm. The number of measurements has been reduced with respect to this method due to the complexity and difficulty of the measurement.
Table 5 shows the values measured with the Mitutoyo SJ400 roughness meter. These values are used to verify the values measured by the laser profilometer.
4. Conclusions
The feed speed of the cutting head is one of the most important and technologically most easily adjustable technological parameters affecting the quality parameters Ra and Rz.
Figure 9 and
Figure 10 show plotted dependencies of surface roughness
Ra,
Rz versus depth of material at the given cutting head feed rates of separating the respective materials. The measured and evaluated surface area of 0.11–19.91 µm gradually passed from smooth to rough surface zone (
Figure 8).
Therefore, the measurement results can be summarized as follows:
The plotted dependencies show that surface roughness varies linearly the deeper the AWJ cut.
All plotted dependencies show a growing trend of roughness values.
As the feed rate decreases, the smooth zone size (characterized by lower roughness values) increases.
It occurs primarily in the first cut zone of the machined surface. This can also be seen in the plotted dependencies where the smallest initial surface roughness is (
Figure 9 and
Figure 10).
The values of the Ra and Rz parameters of the smooth zone are closest to each other, but even at these values, a difference in surface roughness is apparent, depending on the speed of the cutting head.
The Ra and Rz parameter values of the AL120, AL220 and SS050, SS120 samples show a linear increase. The AL370 and SS150 samples exhibit a rather exponential increase in the Ra and Rz parameter values and their value trend is jump-like.
Linearly increasing roughness is true for both the smooth and medium smooth zones (from 0.11 μm to 8.91 μm). An exponential increase in value occurs in the medium rough and rough (end) zone of the surface from 11.11 μm to 19.91 μm.
It follows from the cuts and the measured values compared that the AWJ material separation technology shows equally manifesting increases. Occurrence of reliefs on the sectioned surfaces in both soft (AL) and hard metal materials (SS) was less frequent in the samples made of aluminum than in the samples made of stainless steel.
This means that a different cutting head speed must be used to achieve the same surface roughness in different materials.
We can say that the roughness of the sample surfaces produced by the DRC Company did not exceed the declared roughness of any of the samples used. The task of the experiment was to compare and evaluate the surface of samples produced by the AWJ technology at the DRC Company and to evaluate the measurement methods. The company declares that the surface roughness of each sample produced is not greater than that shown in
Table 2 for each of the samples. The values measured with the contact roughness meter Mitutoyo SJ 400 show its first obvious disadvantage compared to the LPM device. The contact roughness meter does not provide for a complete picture of the surface under evaluation or the roughness of its individual parts. This is because, in measuring the 800 µm section of the surface (the section covered by the tip of the instrument over the measured surface), the result is a single average value of the roughness parameters
Ra and
Rz. When measured with LPM, the measurement result is a set of values that describe the surface areas at each measurement step. The LPM also evaluates the largest depression and the largest protrusion of the surface under evaluation, i.e., it evaluates several parameters in the individual measurement steps. Another advantage is the creation of a 3D image of the examined surface where it is possible to better see the surface nature of the object being measured.