This paper describes the cyclic temperature variation beneath the rake face of a cutting tool in end milling. A newly developed infrared radiation pyrometer equipped with two optical fibers is used to measure the temperature. A small hole is drilled in the tool insert from the underside to near the rake face, and an optical fiber is inserted in the hole. One of the optical fibers runs through the inside of the machine tool spindle and connects to the other optical fiber at the end of the spindle. Infrared rays radiating from the bottom of the hole in the tool insert during machining are accepted and transmitted to the pyrometer by the two optical fibers. For a theoretical analysis of the temperature in end milling, a cutting tool is modeled as a semi-infinite rectangular corner, and a Green’s function approach is used. Variation in tool-chip contact length in end milling is considered in the analysis. Experimentally, titanium alloy Ti–6Al–4V is machined in up and down milling with a tungsten carbide tool insert at a cutting speed of 214 m/min. In up milling, the temperature beneath the rake face increases gradually during the cutting period and reaches a maximum just after the cutting. In contrast, in down milling, the temperature increases immediately after cutting starts; it reaches a maximum and then begins to decrease during cutting. This suggests that the thermal impact to the cutting tool during heating is larger in down milling than in up milling, whereas that during cooling is larger in up milling than in down milling. Temperature variation is measured at different depths from the rake face. With increasing depth from the rake face, the temperature decreases and a time lag occurs in the temperature history. At 0.6 mm from the major cutting edge, the temperature gradient toward the inner direction of the tool insert is about 300°C/0.5mm. The calculated and experimental results agree well.

1.
Chakraverti
,
G.
,
Pandey
,
P. C.
, and
Mehta
,
N. K.
, 1984, “
Analysis of Tool Temperature Fluctuation in Interrupted Cutting
,”
Precis. Eng.
0141-6359,
6
(
2
), pp.
99
105
.
2.
Palmai
,
Z.
, 1987, “
Cutting Temperature in Intermittent Cutting
,”
Int. J. Mach. Tools Manuf.
0890-6955,
27
(
2
), pp.
261
274
.
3.
Stephenson
,
D. A.
, and
Ali
,
A.
, 1992, “
Tool Temperatures in Interrupted Metal Cutting
,”
ASME J. Eng. Ind.
0022-0817,
114
, pp.
127
136
.
4.
Radulescu
,
R.
, and
Kapoor
,
S. G.
, 1994, “
An Analytical Model for Prediction of Tool Temperature Fields During Continuous and Interrupted Cutting
,”
ASME J. Eng. Ind.
0022-0817,
116
, pp.
135
143
.
5.
Jen
,
T. C.
,
Eapen
,
S.
, and
Gutierrez
,
G.
, 2003, “
Nonlinear Numerical Analysis in Transient Cutting Tool Temperatures
,”
ASME J. Manuf. Sci. Eng.
1087-1357,
125
, pp.
48
56
.
6.
Wang
,
K. K.
,
Wu
,
S. M.
, and
Iwata
,
K.
, 1968, “
Temperature Responses and Experimental Errors for Multitooth Milling Cutters
,”
ASME J. Eng. Ind.
0022-0817,
90
, pp.
353
359
.
7.
McFeron
,
D. E.
, and
Chao
,
B. T.
, 1958, “
Transient Interface Temperatures in Plain Peripheral Milling
,”
Trans. ASME
0097-6822,
80
, pp.
321
329
.
8.
Schmidt
,
A. O.
, 1953, “
Workpiece and Surface Temperatures in Milling
,”
Trans. ASME
0097-6822,
75
, pp.
883
890
.
9.
Ueda
,
T.
,
Hosokawa
,
A.
,
Oda
,
K.
, and
Yamada
,
K.
, 2001, “
Temperature on Flank Face of Cutting Tool in High Speed Milling
,”
CIRP Ann.
0007-8506,
50
(
1
), pp.
37
40
.
10.
Toh
,
C. K.
, 2005, “
Comparison of Chip Surface Temperature Between Up and Down Milling Orientations in High Speed Rough Milling of Hardened Steel
,”
J. Mater. Process. Technol.
0924-0136,
167
, pp.
110
118
.
11.
Sato
,
M.
,
Ueda
,
T.
, and
Tanaka
,
H.
, 2007, “
An Experimental Technique for the Measurement of Temperature on CBN Tool Face in End Milling
,”
Int. J. Mach. Tools Manuf.
0890-6955,
47
(
14
), pp.
2071
2076
.
You do not currently have access to this content.