The area of the present invention is the polishing of mechanical parts in titanium or titanium alloy. The invention particularly concerns turbomachine blades, especially large-size blades such as fan blades for jet engines, and pertains in particular to a process for fabricating such blades using said polishing.
For the polishing of mechanical parts, low cost abrasive materials are generally sought which are stress-resistant and generate little pollution. In this area, pollution consists of grains of abrasive material which become trapped within the bulk of the part. For jet engine blades in titanium or titanium alloy, it is essential to prevent this pollution.
Conventionally, for blade polishing, abrasive belts of silicon carbide are used. The belt is mounted on a wheel driven in rotation tangentially to the surface of the workpiece. The wheel's movement relative to the surface of the workpiece is piloted by a programme in accordance with desired geometry. Parameters such as the travel speed of the belt over the surface, wheel velocity with respect to the workpiece and the pressure exerted on the surface are determined so as to remove the desired thickness of material and to ensure a certain surface condition. A description of a polishing machine using abrasive belts can be found in patent U.S. Pat. No. 5,193,314.
However, this material is not fully satisfactory.
The belts wear rapidly. In the case of jet engine fan blades for example, two belts are consumed per workpiece to achieve geometric conformity from a semi-finished blank.
The abrasive material pollutes the titanium. Precautions need to be taken for its avoidance.
The depositing of the abrasive on commercially available belts is generally made by electrostatic means. The regularity of deposit is not optimum. It leads to some dispersion in terms of material removal. Polishing is not homogeneous. It is subsequently necessary to conduct manual rework to remove material, possibly associated with thickness readjustment.
Abrasive belt polishing is used in particular for achieving the geometric conformity of semi-finished blades produced by forging for example. A determined thickness of material is removed by polishing. With conventional abrasive material, however, an insufficient quantity of material is removed by the wheel and its abrasive belt, and additional operations are required to remove material and to control thickness. Therefore, to achieve the geometric conformity of a semi-finished forged blade, the process includes chemical machining before polishing. After the part has been polished a first time with a determined grain size, it must then undergo chemical machining and manual rework on electric straight grinding wheels or on brushing wheels or other portable machine.
The present invention sets out to overcome the disadvantages encountered with prior art abrasive belts.
According to the invention, the automated polishing process for semi-finished mechanical parts in titanium or titanium alloy, using a machine with abrasive belt mounted on a tangential contact wheel driven in rotation at determined velocity and applied under determined pressure, the wheel travelling with respect to the surface of the part at a determined rate, is characterized by the fact that the abrasive belt consists of superabrasive grains in industrial diamond or cubic boron nitride.
After testing, it was surprisingly found that the use of belts of this type made it possible to overcome the problems raised by conventional abrasive belts.
The abrasive layer of the belt is more precise. With diamond for example, the belt is formed by more homogeneous electrochemical deposit. The superabrasive grains are backed by a layer of nickel which itself is integral with a polyester base. The nickel layer absorbs the heat and prevents work hardening of the part.
On account of the greater precision of the belt's abrasive layer, the quantities of material are removed with very low thickness dispersion. This low dispersion provides a major advantage for achieving geometric conformity of blades made from semi-finished parts having a determined allowance. The difference in the extent of material removal with respect to a set dimension is sufficiently small to remain within the tolerance range for blade shape. There is therefore no need to conduct further manual adjustments by grinding.
In particular, for blade polishing, when it is required to reduce a determined allowance subsisting after forging or machining of the part, the machine parameters are set at the following intervals:
The thickness allowance lies between 2/10 and 4/10 mm.
Advantageously, the contact wheel is grooved, having grooves arranged obliquely with respect to the axis of rotation of the wheel. In particular, the angle is 25 to 35°.
More particularly, the contact surface of the wheel with the abrasive belt has a hardness of 70 Shore.
The invention is described below in more detail with reference to a non-restrictive embodiment and referring to the appended drawings in which:
The machine has five or six degrees of freedom. An example of embodiment 1 is shown
All the motor means are connected to a transmitter which comprises a command unit with programming means and memories for storage in particular of the geometric data of the part to be polished.
To polish the part, the belt is applied locally, tangential to its surface, by exerting a determined pressure and it is set in movement. It rotates with the wheel about its axis.
The desired thickness removal and surface condition depend both upon the grain size of the belt and on applied machine parameters and the characteristics of the contact wheel.
The parameters of a machine so configured are:
These parameters are determined for a defined wheel, both geometrically and according to the quality of its constituent material. For example, a wheel is used of determined width 25 mm, with determined outer diameter 120 mm. On its surface the wheel comprises grooves inclined at 30°, of width 3 mm and distanced apart by 17 mm. The material on the wheel's periphery is rubber having a hardness of 70 shore for example.
Said machine is used for geometric conforming operations and for finishing a semi-finished part by polishing.
These operations comprise a certain number of steps which are described below. The shape and size characteristics of the semi-finished part arriving from the forging station are close to those of the finished part. However, its dimensions are not yet final on account of a determined allowance. In precision forging, this allowance is fixed at 2/10 to 4/10 mm. The purpose of the automated polishing process is to remove this allowance.
Before polishing, the semi-finished part has to be prepared.
First, so-called tri-thickness control is conducted to verify the dimensions of the part and, if required, the surface parts of insufficient thickness are masked. This thickness readjustment may be achieved by applying an adhesive tape.
The following preparation step consists of chemical machining. This involves the chemical dissolution of the titanium alloys in a bath consisting of nitric acid, hydrofluoric acid and other agents such as wetting agents or water. The immersion time in the bath determines the quantity of removed material. The advantage of chemical machining is that a uniform thickness of material is removed irrespective of shape.
If necessary, these two operations are repeated until a determined allowance is obtained which is to be removed by the polishing operation.
The polishing operation, by passing the part through a machine fitted with an abrasive belt, is known in itself. A first so-called rough polishing is conducted.
Conventionally, a belt is used whose abrasive is silicon carbide having a grain size of 120 for example. The quantity of material removed is 0.25+/−0.1 mm.
Owing to the nature of the abrasive belt, the quantity dispersion of removed material is high.
A second control of the above-mentioned tri-thickness type is performed associated with chemical machining if necessary.
This control is followed by a manual adjustment step on a brushing wheel; this is a delicate operation and can only be performed by qualified personnel. If the blades are large-sized, these manual operations are the possible cause of occupational injuries such as repetitive strain injury (RSI).
Finish polishing is then conducted using a belt with finer grain size. However, on account of dispersion, removal values lie for example between 0.1 mm+/−0.05 mm. Final validation of geometry with manual rework may be necessary.
According to the invention, the belt used comprises superabrasive grains such as grains of industrial diamond or cubic boron nitride.
Said abrasive belts are available commercially from companies such as 3M, Saint Gobain Abrasives or KGS
Owing to the homogeneity of its structure, this type of belt can remove material with low thickness dispersion. Accuracy may be in the order of 0.01 mm for a belt having a grain size of 220 (=74 μm).
The machine parameters were determined to remove a thickness of no more than 3/10 in one pass:
The contact wheel used has the following characteristics:
Once the semi-finished part has been prepared so that it comprises an allowance with respect to desired dimensions, that is accurately defined whether chemical machining is used or geometric conforming by manual rework (using carbide cutters for example on electric straight grinders) or a combination of both operations, a part having the desired dimensions is achieved directly after polishing with said belts. There is no need for manual adjustment operations between the two polishing operations, the so-called rough polishing and finish polishing. In remarkable manner, it is possible to remain within the shape tolerance laid down by specifications.
Rough polishing using a diamond belt of grain size 60 (=250 μm) removes a quantity of material of 0.3 mm+/−0.05 mm and ensures a surface condition of 1.8 μm.
Finish polishing using a diamond belt of grain size 220 (=74 μm) removes a quantity of material of 0.1 mm+/−0.01 mm and ensures a surface condition of 0.8 μm.
The final validation operation, which consists of dimension and appearance control, is possible without the use of a brushing wheel or portable polishing machine.
The scope of the invention also covers conducting the rough polishing by any known means such as chemical machining, manual polishing or any mechanical polishing, insofar as the finish polishing is performed using the polishing technique with diamond belt.
More generally, rough polishing is made on an allowance defined to allow material removal of between 0.1 mm and 0.8 mm, preferably between 0.2 mm and 0.4 mm and further preferably, as mentioned previously, of 0.3 mm+/−0.05 mm.
Finish polishing using the diamond belt with finer grain size, according to the invention, is performed to ensure material removal of between 0.01 and 0.2 mm+/−0.01 mm and preferably of 0.1 mm+/−0.01 mm.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
03 12005 | Oct 2003 | FR | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4718197 | Rath | Jan 1988 | A |
5040337 | Spirito et al. | Aug 1991 | A |
5193314 | Wormley et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
6277160 | Stubbs et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6280288 | Gaeta et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6383064 | Eggert et al. | May 2002 | B1 |
20030100242 | Annigeri et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
20030106270 | Baldoni et al. | Jun 2003 | A1 |
20040185754 | Adefris et al. | Sep 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
44 24 167 | Jan 1996 | DE |
0 263 785 | Apr 1988 | EP |
WO 9805473 | Feb 1998 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20050136799 A1 | Jun 2005 | US |