On the Lubricity and Comparative Life Cycle of Biobased Synthetic and Mineral Oil Emulsions in Machining Titanium Ti-6Al-4V at Low Cutting Speed
Abstract
:Highlights
- Enhanced lubricity of biobased Metal Working Fluids (MWF) over mineral oil emulsions to machine titanium at low speed
- Method of soft synchronous tapping to evaluate MWFs on machine tool
- Method to calculate GHG Greenhouse Gas emission of MWFs
- Significant reduction in Greenhouse Gas emission for fully synthetic MWFs for cleaner manufacturing
Abstract
1. Introduction
Classification of MWFs
2. Experimental Methodology
2.1. Materials and Workpiece
2.2. Layout of Blind Holes in Each Workpiece Block
2.3. Tap Tool and Process Parameters
2.4. Machine and Instrumentation
2.5. Preparation of Cutting Fluids
2.6. Workpiece and Tool Preparation
2.7. Method of Tapping
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Relative Lubricity of CFs
3.2. New Performance Measure to Characterise CF Lubricity
4. Impact of CF on GHG Emissions
5. Conclusions
- Torque and thrust results confirm the FS group has significantly higher lubricity (TTTeff = 128%) over the SS and HDE groups (TTTeff, respectively, 97% and 95%). Within the FS group FS-bio displayed the highest overall lubricity (TTTeff = 140%).
- Soft synchronous machine tapping displayed significant benefit in reducing Tapping Thrust Force (TTF) compared to results obtained in the literature for rigid tapping the same alloy. Comparing the emulsion CFs tested in this paper the best result was the FS group with TTFeff = 135%, with TTFeff, respectively, for the SS and HDE groups 78% and 92%. The finding suggests TTFeff is a sensitive measure of CF lubricity.
- Flank friction on the tap guide length accounts for 50% of the total energy dissipated in cutting the thread.
- Life cycle assessment of the machining power consumed per annum established the GHG emitted from the FS group was less than half the SS and HDE groups.
- Aggregating mineral extraction and production with dilution of CF for use, end-of-life disposal and power dissipated annually in machining, GHG emission was significantly reduced for the FS group. Total GHG emitted annually from the FS group was just 17% of the HDE group whilst FS-bio displayed a significant reduction over the FS group as a whole emitting just 7% GHG relative to the HDE group.
- GHG emitted from power consumption in machining for the SS and HDE groups was only a tiny fraction of the total GHG emitted over the CF life cycle. Whilst FS group and FS-bio displayed the reverse effect and serves to emphasize the important role of CF lubricity in reducing GHG emissions.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category | Description [ASTM E2523-13:2018] |
---|---|
Heavy Duty Emulsion (HDE) | Contains >30% petroleum oil with other functional additives and emulsifiers before dilution with water for use. |
Semi Synthetic (SS) | Contains >20% water and <50% petroleum oil with functional additives before dilution with water for use. |
Fully Synthetic (FS) | Mineral oil free with functional additives and may contain emulsifiers. Depending on the synthetic base stock, when mixed with water forms either a true solution (no micelles) or an emulsion. |
Performance Measure | HDE | SS | FS | FS-Bio | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Technical | Cooling | 2 | 2 | 3 | 3 |
Lubricity | 2 | 2 | 1 | 1–3 | |
Environment With H&S | Corrosion control | 1 | 2 | 2 | - |
Microbial control | 1 | 2 | 3 | - | |
Tramp oil resistance | 2 | 2 | 1 | - | |
Evaporation and aerosol mist | 1 | 2 | 3 | - | |
Biodegradability * | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | |
Toxicity * | 1 | 2 | 2–3 | 3 |
Tensile Strength (MPa) | Yield Strength (0.2%) | Elongation at Fracture (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
(Min to max) | 966–969 | 913–919 | 12.6–16.1 |
Data sheet [44] | 950 | 880 | 14 |
Category | Concentrate Base Stock | Product Technical Information from Safety Data Sheet | Concentrate Density (g/cm3) | Brix (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
CFref | Mineral oil base with additives | Free of boron, formaldehyde, chlorine and phenolics | 0.94 | 9 |
FS1 | Mineral oil free, vegetable stock | Free of chlorine, formaldehyde, biocides, nitrite, phosphates, and sulphur | 0.95 | 9 |
FS2 | Mineral oil free, synthetic additives | Free of chlorine, sulphur, boron, formaldehyde, nitrites and phenolics | 1.06 | 6.8 |
FS3 | Mineral oil free, true solution | Free of boric acid and formaldehyde | 1.05 | 5 |
SS1 | Mineral oil base with additives | Contains corrosion preventing additives and glycol stabilizers | 0.98 | 8 |
SS2 | Synthetic oil base with additives | Free of chlorine | 0.96 | 8.2 |
SS3 | Mineral oil base with additives | Free of boron, formaldehyde, and chlorine | ~1 | 9 |
HDE1 | “ | Free of chlorine | 0.97 | 9.2 |
HDE2 | “ | Free of boron, formaldehyde, chlorine and phenolics | 0.93 | 8.8 |
HDE3 | “ | Free of boron, formaldehyde, chlorine, and glycol | 0.95 | 9.9 |
CF | Water | Mineral Oil | Synthetic Additive |
---|---|---|---|
HDE | 5% | 83% (60–85%) | 12% |
SS | 40% | 35% (5–50%) | 25% |
FS | 90% | - | 10% |
Activity Emission Factors | FS | FS-Bio | SS | HDE |
---|---|---|---|---|
CF diluted for use (kg CO2eq/kg) | 0.363 | 0.277 | 1.680 | 1.880 |
CF disposal (kg CO2eq/kg) | 0.283 | 0.030 | 1.710 | 2.710 |
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Wood, P.; Boud, F.; Carter, W.; Varasteh, H.; Gunputh, U.; Pawlik, M.; Clementson, J.; Lu, Y.; Hossain, S.; Broderick, M.; et al. On the Lubricity and Comparative Life Cycle of Biobased Synthetic and Mineral Oil Emulsions in Machining Titanium Ti-6Al-4V at Low Cutting Speed. J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2022, 6, 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp6060154
Wood P, Boud F, Carter W, Varasteh H, Gunputh U, Pawlik M, Clementson J, Lu Y, Hossain S, Broderick M, et al. On the Lubricity and Comparative Life Cycle of Biobased Synthetic and Mineral Oil Emulsions in Machining Titanium Ti-6Al-4V at Low Cutting Speed. Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing. 2022; 6(6):154. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp6060154
Chicago/Turabian StyleWood, Paul, Fathi Boud, Wayne Carter, Hirbod Varasteh, Urvashi Gunputh, Marzena Pawlik, Jenny Clementson, Yiling Lu, Syed Hossain, Matthew Broderick, and et al. 2022. "On the Lubricity and Comparative Life Cycle of Biobased Synthetic and Mineral Oil Emulsions in Machining Titanium Ti-6Al-4V at Low Cutting Speed" Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing 6, no. 6: 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp6060154
APA StyleWood, P., Boud, F., Carter, W., Varasteh, H., Gunputh, U., Pawlik, M., Clementson, J., Lu, Y., Hossain, S., Broderick, M., Raguraman, M., Smith, A., Mantle, A., & McGourlay, J. (2022). On the Lubricity and Comparative Life Cycle of Biobased Synthetic and Mineral Oil Emulsions in Machining Titanium Ti-6Al-4V at Low Cutting Speed. Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing, 6(6), 154. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp6060154