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Chand Kare Develops Grindability Test System
Extensive measurements (using the CGTS) for grindability of various technical ceramics indicate that grindability is a unique property of ceramics that cannot be characterized by hardness or flexural strength alone. Ceramics of similar mechanical properties can have very different grindabilities, and ceramics of very different mechanical properties can have similar grindabilities. Therefore, in evaluating ceramics for their cost-effective application, grindability should be considered, as well as other mechanical properties such as hardness, flexural strength, and fracture toughness. Today, many ceramic manufacturers around the world supply ceramic materials of similar properties. However, these materials often reveal very different machining characteristics that require different machining procedures. To achieve overall cost-effectiveness, ceramics with superior properties and good machining characteristics are required. Furthermore, a scientific method is needed for quickly and cost-effectively choosing the appropriate process parameters for each ceramic. Grindability studies and testing become necessary to provide a fundamental understanding of the grinding behavior of ceramics. Mathematical Definition of GrindabilityGrindability can be considered in terms of productivity, cost, and quality. The cost-effective machining of ceramics requires that measures of grindability should be easy to obtain experimentally. Volumetric removal rate under controlled-force grinding is a cost-effective measure of ceramic grindability. Under controlled-force grinding, material-removal rate is a function of normal force F(n), wheel speed v(s), material properties (o)c, and wheel characteristics (o)d, or
To find a parameter depending only on material properties, we define
Experimental results indicate that proportional relationships exist between material-removal rate and both belt speed and normal force (Fig. 2); therefore, grindability G(c) can be defined as:
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Reprinted from Ceramic Technology Newsletter, Issue No. 47, Summer 1995. |
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URL of this page is http://www.html.ornl.gov/mituc/chand.htm. |
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