Enhancing Micro-Milling Performance of Ti6Al4V: An Experimental Analysis of Ultrasonic Vibration Effects on Forces, Surface Topography, and Burr Formation
Abstrak
The current study focuses on axial ultrasonic vibration-assisted micro-milling as an advanced technique to improve the machining performance of Ti6Al4V, a material whose difficult-to-cut properties present a significant barrier to manufacturing the high-quality micro-components essential for aerospace and biomedical applications. A full factorial design was employed to evaluate the influence of feed-per-tooth (f<sub>z</sub>), axial depth-of-cut (a<sub>p</sub>), and ultrasonic vibration on cutting forces, surface roughness, burr formation, and tool wear. Experimental results demonstrate that ultrasonic assistance significantly reduces cutting forces by 20.09% and tool wear by promoting periodic tool–workpiece separation and improving chip evacuation. However, it increases surface roughness due to the formation of uniform micro-dimples, which may enhance tribological properties. Burr dimensions were primarily governed by feed-per-tooth, with higher feeds minimizing burr size. The study provides actionable insights into optimizing machining parameters for cutting Ti6Al4V, highlighting the trade-offs between force reduction, surface texture, and burr control. These findings contribute to advancing ultrasonic-assisted micro-milling for industrial applications, namely aerospace and biomedical applications requiring high precision and extended tool life.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (4)
Asmaa Wadee
Mohamed G. A. Nassef
Florian Pape
Ibrahem Maher
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2025
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/jmmp9110356
- Akses
- Open Access ✓