TY - JOUR
T1 - Tribology of enhanced turning using biolubricants
T2 - A comparative assessment
AU - Wang, Xiaoming
AU - Li, Changhe
AU - Zhang, Yanbin
AU - Ali, Hafiz Muhammad
AU - Sharma, Shubham
AU - Li, Runze
AU - Yang, Min
AU - Said, Zafar
AU - Liu, Xin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/10
Y1 - 2022/10
N2 - The tribological behavior of cutting is a decisive factor in changing the production cycle, cost, and quality of parts. Minimum quantity lubrication (MQL) based on environmentally friendly biolubricants can convert contact conditions in cutting zones, but it cannot meet the manufacturing requirements of difficult-to-machine materials in the continuous friction turning process. Under the boundary conditions of high temperature, high cutting speed, and high pressure at the tool–workpiece interface, the scientific issue of performance enhancement remains unclear and thus has been the focus of academic and industry research. Moreover, under the continuous cutting boundary condition, technology enhancement as a development trend has not yet been systematically reviewed. Wetting, friction reduction, and heat transfer mechanisms have also not yet been investigated. In this study, the cooling lubrication mechanism and technical iteration motivation of MQL were initially analyzed. Subsequently, a quantized comparative assessment of cutting force, cutting temperature, tool wear, and surface quality under enhanced environmentally friendly lubrication turning, including parts enhanced by nanoparticles, cryogenic medium, ultrasonic vibration, and textured tools, was performed. The technical performance, parameter optimization, and mechanism of enhanced MQL were comprehensively studied, and the development stages of biolubricant MQL turning (MQLT) were fully reviewed. Finally, the development trend of the theory and application of MQLT for difficult-to-machine materials was prospected. This study may be used by scientists to deeply understand the mechanism, tribological behavior, and development trend of lubrication in relation to continuous cutting.
AB - The tribological behavior of cutting is a decisive factor in changing the production cycle, cost, and quality of parts. Minimum quantity lubrication (MQL) based on environmentally friendly biolubricants can convert contact conditions in cutting zones, but it cannot meet the manufacturing requirements of difficult-to-machine materials in the continuous friction turning process. Under the boundary conditions of high temperature, high cutting speed, and high pressure at the tool–workpiece interface, the scientific issue of performance enhancement remains unclear and thus has been the focus of academic and industry research. Moreover, under the continuous cutting boundary condition, technology enhancement as a development trend has not yet been systematically reviewed. Wetting, friction reduction, and heat transfer mechanisms have also not yet been investigated. In this study, the cooling lubrication mechanism and technical iteration motivation of MQL were initially analyzed. Subsequently, a quantized comparative assessment of cutting force, cutting temperature, tool wear, and surface quality under enhanced environmentally friendly lubrication turning, including parts enhanced by nanoparticles, cryogenic medium, ultrasonic vibration, and textured tools, was performed. The technical performance, parameter optimization, and mechanism of enhanced MQL were comprehensively studied, and the development stages of biolubricant MQL turning (MQLT) were fully reviewed. Finally, the development trend of the theory and application of MQLT for difficult-to-machine materials was prospected. This study may be used by scientists to deeply understand the mechanism, tribological behavior, and development trend of lubrication in relation to continuous cutting.
KW - Biolubricant
KW - Cryogenic
KW - Minimum quantity lubrication
KW - Texture
KW - Tribology
KW - Turning
KW - Ultrasonic vibration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85133912741&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85133912741&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.triboint.2022.107766
DO - 10.1016/j.triboint.2022.107766
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85133912741
SN - 0301-679X
VL - 174
JO - Tribology International
JF - Tribology International
M1 - 107766
ER -