Machining and Cutting of CP Titanium and
Ti-alloys
Amongst the
clichès that have been associated with titanium
since it made its appearance in the
technological field more than 40 years ago, one
is certainly not true: that it is difficult to
be machined.
This reputation
is probably due to the incorrect approach of
many new users who have ignored the Physical
characteristics of titanium.
In fact, if
specific machining approach and the minimum
experience are required in any job, machining
titanium does not present any particular
difficulty and can be undertaken by any workshop
that works with commitment and professionalism.
This leaflet is
certainly not intended to be a manual on
machining techniques but merely a starting point
for workers. lt provides suggestions, advice and
data that equipment designers and machine
operators can use as a guide in order to find
the best specifications for each equipment and
machining tool.
General
Principles on Titanium Machining
The term
machining refers to all the types of working
with removal of chips; it also includes cutting.
The first
activities include turning, boring, milling,
drilling, tapping, broaching, planning, toothing,
grinding and lapping.
Cutting could
logically be restricted to sawing or nibbling.
However, we shall examine not only mechanical
cutting but also heat cutting (oxyacetylene,
plasma, laser) and water-jet cutting.
lt is not more
difficult to work with titanium than with
stainless steel, which is commonly machined
today.
Only Ti-alloys, with high number of alloy
elements, may present greater difficulties.
Machining Grades
1, 2, 3, 4, 7 and 11 presents no particular
difficulties as long as chemical and physical
characteristics are understood correctly as we
said before.
All these
characteristics distinguish Ti from other
structural materials and regulate the degree to
which it can be worked.
The most important, to be mentioned, are:
• Low heat
conductivity; so that the heat, generated by
cutting, is not dispersed rapidly by being
conduction to the inside of piece, but
concentrates on the cutting edge and on the tool
face.
The high temperatures achieved may lead to
tempering and blunting of the cutting parts with
consequent further rise in temperature and
further shortening of working life of the tool.
• High degree of
chemical reactivity with almost all the
materials, especially at high temperatures; that
may lead to abrasions, microwelds and spreading
with the cutting tools.
• Low level of
elastic modulus: it is appreciated in the final
product but it may initially cause some
difficulties with machining. Under tool pressure,
the elastic material tends to distance itself
from the cutting zone, especially during light
passes. The thinner parts are deflected and
instead to cut the cutting edge tends to slide
along the work piece and to create vibrations
with generation of heat.
• Hardening
caused by machining means that there is
virtually no built-up edge. The lack of a
stationary mass of material in front of the tool
causes high cutting angles to be formed. This
leads to the formation of a thin chip in contact
with a relatively small area of the tool face so
that high loads are created over a section unit.
This fact, together with the use of a tool with
an inappropriate geometry and probably not sharp,
tends to push the material rather than cutting,
to stress and cause plastic deformation.
ln turn, plastic deformation tends to harden the
material and thus increases hardness and
resistance so that cutting speeds correct at the
beginning of the task become excessive and the
tool wears out excessively.
• Stress in the
material may appear and are mainly caused by
severe deformation during forging of products.
This is particular for alloys with high strength.
e.g. titanium grade 5.
• Stress and
variation in mechanical values may apply for
alloyed titanium with high strength. This can be
caused by high forge impact, to low forging
temperature or insufficient mix of elements
during the meeting of ingots. Titanium has also
an tendency to return to original shape. This
may cause problems when machining thin wall
products with narrow tolerances.
Often, those who
tried to work titanium proceeded by trial
spending a lot of time looking for tools. They
based their calculations on data traditional for
other materials, failing to observe the
characteristics described, which clearly dictate
the work criteria to be adopted and which
basically hold true for all types of machine
tool and titanium.
These criteria
can be summarized as follows:
• Use of low
cutting speeds to minimize heat built-up.
Excessive cutting speeds are much more harmful
with titanium than with other materials: a 30%
increase in speed can reduce tool life by 80%.
• Use of
relatively high speeds of travel. Temperature is
less influenced by speed of travel than by
cutting speed. Travel speeds should therefore be
as high as compatible with efficient working.
• Use of a large
flow of cutting fluid to increase the cooling
effect. Also, the fluid must be oriented
directly to the cutting point. Because of the
low heat conductivity, the refrigerating effect
is in fact very reduced unless it is carried
directly on the point at which the heat is
created.
• Use of tools
with controlled sharpening and their replacement
as soon as they become worn. When working with a
complex tooling machine or machining station due
to the amortization costs of the machine,
production is much more important than the
lifetime of the cutting tool. lt is therefore
advisable to use the tool to the limit of its
capacity and to replace it as soon as its
cutting efficiency starts to reduce.
• Guaranty of
high stiffness for the whole machining system
(machine, spindle, tool holder and tool) to
compensate for the elasticity of the material
and to reduce vibrations to a minimum level.
• No stopping on
travel whilst the work piece and the tool are in
Contact. Leaving the tool in position causes the
material to be immediately hardened and
over-heated and causes abrasions, seizing up and
breakage of the tool.
• Items with
thin wall and narrow tolerances machined out of
solid bars should be pre-machined close down to
final size, and kept a day for stabilization
prior to final machining of the item.