TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of tool posture variations and SIM method application on surface topography in 5-axis ball-end milling
AU - Zhao, Zhao
AU - Wei, Wenming
AU - Zhao, Wanhua
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2025/10
Y1 - 2025/10
N2 - Surface topography serves as a critical determinant of fatigue strength and tribological performance in five-axis ball-end milling of complex curved workpieces, where residual height and texture geometry are significantly influenced by variations in tool posture. To investigate the evolution of surface topography with kinematic parameters in five-axis ball-end milling, this study proposed an innovative Sweep-Inerpolate-Map (SIM) model for the prediction of three-dimensional surface topography. The experimental measurements and simulated predictions of surface topography demonstrated strong consistency through multivariate cutting experiments conducted under three critical parameters: feedrate ranging 0.2–0.5 mm/rev, B-axis angle (θb) ranging 0°∼10°, and C-axis angle (θc) ranging 0°∼360°. Detailed analysis revealed two key mechanisms: (1) The Texture Unit Inclination Angle (TUIA) exhibits sinusoidal periodicity with respect to θb and θc, TUIA reaches extremum values in clockwise/counterclockwise directions when θb>0° with θc at 90° or 270°, respectively; (2) The Peak Line Residual Height (PLRH) is primarily governed by θb, showing significant positive correlation between its amplitude/fluctuation range and θb. PLRH demonstrates minimal sensitivity to rotational angles and feed directions with θb ranging 0°∼20°. Through systematic simulations and experimental validation, this study constructed a rigorous quantitative mapping framework between kinematic parameters and surface texture characteristics in ball-end milling, thereby providing a solid theoretical foundation for optimizing cutting parameters and achieving active control over texture shape.
AB - Surface topography serves as a critical determinant of fatigue strength and tribological performance in five-axis ball-end milling of complex curved workpieces, where residual height and texture geometry are significantly influenced by variations in tool posture. To investigate the evolution of surface topography with kinematic parameters in five-axis ball-end milling, this study proposed an innovative Sweep-Inerpolate-Map (SIM) model for the prediction of three-dimensional surface topography. The experimental measurements and simulated predictions of surface topography demonstrated strong consistency through multivariate cutting experiments conducted under three critical parameters: feedrate ranging 0.2–0.5 mm/rev, B-axis angle (θb) ranging 0°∼10°, and C-axis angle (θc) ranging 0°∼360°. Detailed analysis revealed two key mechanisms: (1) The Texture Unit Inclination Angle (TUIA) exhibits sinusoidal periodicity with respect to θb and θc, TUIA reaches extremum values in clockwise/counterclockwise directions when θb>0° with θc at 90° or 270°, respectively; (2) The Peak Line Residual Height (PLRH) is primarily governed by θb, showing significant positive correlation between its amplitude/fluctuation range and θb. PLRH demonstrates minimal sensitivity to rotational angles and feed directions with θb ranging 0°∼20°. Through systematic simulations and experimental validation, this study constructed a rigorous quantitative mapping framework between kinematic parameters and surface texture characteristics in ball-end milling, thereby providing a solid theoretical foundation for optimizing cutting parameters and achieving active control over texture shape.
KW - 5-Axis ball-end milling
KW - Kinematic parameters
KW - Peak-valley line residual height
KW - Surface topography
KW - Texture unit inclination angle
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105009345472
U2 - 10.1016/j.precisioneng.2025.06.003
DO - 10.1016/j.precisioneng.2025.06.003
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105009345472
SN - 0141-6359
VL - 96
SP - 346
EP - 367
JO - Precision Engineering
JF - Precision Engineering
ER -