The present invention is generally directed to composite articles, such as, for example, tool blanks, cutting tool inserts, spade drill inserts, and ballnose endmills, having a composite construction including regions of differing composite materials.
Certain non-limiting embodiments of a composite article according to the present disclosure comprise at least a first composite material and a second composite material, wherein each of the first and second composite materials individually comprises hard particles in a binder, and wherein the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the first composite material is different from the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the second composite material. Also, in certain non-limiting embodiments of a composite article according to the present disclosure, one of the first and second composite materials comprises ruthenium in the binder and the other of the first and second composite materials lacks ruthenium or comprises no more than an incidental concentration of ruthenium in the binder. Examples of composite articles according to the present disclosure include, but are not limited to, cemented carbide tools used in material removal operations such as, for example, turning, milling, threading, grooving, drilling, reaming, countersinking, counterboring, and end milling.
Cutting tool inserts employed for machining of metals and metallic (i.e., metal-containing) alloys are commonly fabricated from composite materials. Composite materials provide an attractive combination of mechanical properties, such as strength, toughness, and wear resistance, compared to certain other tool materials, such as tool steels and ceramics. Conventional cutting tool inserts made from a composite material, such as cemented carbide, are based on a “monolithic” construction, which means that they are fabricated from a single grade of cemented carbide. As such, conventional monolithic cutting tools have substantially the same mechanical and chemical properties at all locations throughout the tool.
Cemented carbide materials or, more simply, “carbide materials” or “carbides”, comprise at least two phases: at least one hard particulate ceramic component; and a softer matrix of metallic binder. The hard ceramic component may be, for example, carbides of any carbide-forming element, such as, for example, titanium, chromium, vanadium, zirconium, hafnium, molybdenum, tantalum, tungsten, and niobium. A common, non-limiting example is tungsten carbide. The binder may be a metal or metallic alloy, typically cobalt, nickel, iron, or alloys of any of these metals. The binder “cements” the ceramic component within a continuous matrix interconnected in three dimensions. As is known in the art, cemented carbides may be fabricated by consolidating a powder including at least one powdered ceramic component and at least one powdered metallic binder material.
The physical and chemical properties of cemented carbides depend in part on the individual components of the metallurgical powders used to produce the materials. The properties of a particular cemented carbide are determined by, for example, the chemical composition of the ceramic component, the particle size of the ceramic component, the chemical composition of the binder, and the weight or volume ratio of binder to ceramic component. By varying the ingredients of the metallurgical powder, cutting tools, such as cutting tool inserts, including indexable inserts, drills and end mills can be produced with unique properties matched to specific cutting applications.
In applications involving the machining of modern metallic materials, enriched grades of carbide are often utilized to achieve the desired quality and productivity requirements. However, cutting tool inserts having a monolithic carbide construction composed of higher grades of cemented carbides are expensive to fabricate, primarily due to high material costs. In addition, it is difficult to optimize the composition of conventional monolithic indexable cutting inserts composed of single grades of carbide material to meet the differing demands placed on the various regions of the inserts.
Composite rotary tools made of two or more different carbide materials or grades are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,511,265. At this time, composite carbide cutting tool inserts are more difficult to manufacture than rotary cutting tools. For example, cutting inserts are, typically, much smaller than rotary cutting tools. Also, the geometries, in particular, cutting edges and chip breaker configurations, of current cutting tool inserts are complex in nature. With cutting tool inserts, the final product is produced by a pressing and sintering process, and the process also may include subsequent grinding operations.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,389,952, which issued in 1983, describes an innovative method of making composite cemented carbide tools by first manufacturing a slurry containing a mixture of carbide powder and a liquid vehicle, and then painting or spraying a surface layer of the mixture onto a green compact of a different carbide. A composite carbide tool made in this way has distinct mechanical properties differing between the core region and the surface layer. The described applications of this method include fabricating rock drilling tools, mining tools and indexable cutting tool inserts for metal machining. However, the slurry-based method described in the '952 patent can only be applied to making indexable cutting inserts without chip breaker geometries or, at best, with very simple chip breaker geometries. This is because a thick layer of slurry will alter the insert's chip breaker geometry. Widely used indexable cutting inserts, in particular, must have intricate chip breaker geometries in order to meet the ever-increasing demands for machining a variety of work materials. In addition, performing the slurry-based method of producing composite tools and inserts requires a substantially greater investment in specialized manufacturing operations and production equipment.
Ruthenium (Ru) is a member of the platinum group and is a hard, lustrous, white metal that has a melting point of approximately 2,500° C. Ruthenium does not tarnish at room temperatures, and may be used as an effective hardener, creating alloys that are extremely wear resistant. It has been found that including ruthenium in a cobalt binder in cemented carbide used in cutting tools or cutting tool inserts improves resistance to thermal cracking and significantly reduces crack propagation along the edges and into the body of the cutting tool or cutting tool insert. Typical commercially available cutting tools and cutting tool inserts may include a cemented carbide substrate having a binder phase including approximately 3% to 30% ruthenium. A significant disadvantage of adding ruthenium, however, is that it is a relatively expensive alloying ingredient.
A cutting tool insert including a cemented carbide substrate may comprise one or more coating layers on the substrate surface to enhance cutting performance. Methods for coating cemented carbide cutting tools include chemical vapor deposition (CVD), physical vapor deposition (PVD) and diamond coating.
There is a need to develop improved efficient, low cost cutting tool inserts for metal and metallic alloy machining applications.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a composite article is provided including a first composite material and a second composite material. The first composite material and the second composite material individually comprise hard particles in a binder, and a concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the first composite material is different from a concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the second composite material.
In certain non-limiting embodiments of a composite article according to the present disclosure, the binder of the first composite material includes 1 to 30 weight percent, 3 to 25 weight percent, or 8 to 20 weight percent ruthenium. Also, in certain non-limiting embodiments of a composite article according to the present disclosure, the binder of the second composite material lacks ruthenium or includes only an incidental concentration of ruthenium. In addition, according to certain non-limiting embodiments of a composite article according to the present disclosure, the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the first composite material and the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the second composite material differ by at least 1 weight percent, at least 5 weight percent, or at least 10 weight percent.
In certain non-limiting embodiments, the composite article according to the present disclosure is one of a cutting tool and a cutting tool insert. For example, embodiments of the composite article according to the present disclosure may be selected from a ballnose end mill, a ballnose cutting insert, a milling cutting insert, a spade drill insert, a drilling insert, a turning cutting insert, a grooving insert, a threading insert, a cut-off insert, and a boring insert.
Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing quantities of ingredients, time, temperatures, and so forth used in the present specification and claims are to be understood as being modified in all instances by the term “about.” At the very least, and not as an attempt to limit the application of the doctrine of equivalents to the scope of the claims, each numerical parameter should at least be construed in light of the number of reported significant digits and by applying ordinary rounding techniques.
Notwithstanding that the numerical ranges and parameters setting forth the broad scope of the invention are approximations, the numerical values set forth in the specific examples are reported as precisely as possible. Any numerical value, however, may inherently contain certain errors necessarily resulting from the standard deviation found in their respective testing measurements.
The reader will appreciate the foregoing details and advantages of the present invention, as well as others, upon consideration of the following detailed description of certain non-limiting embodiments of the invention. The reader also may comprehend such additional details and advantages of the present invention upon making and/or using embodiments within the present invention.
a through 1d depict an embodiment of a square indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising three regions of composite materials.
a through 2c depict an embodiment of a square indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 3c depict an embodiment of a diamond-shaped indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising three regions of composite materials.
a through 4c depict an embodiment of a square indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 5d depict an embodiment of a diamond-shaped indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising five regions of composite materials.
a through 6c depict an embodiment of an indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 7c depict an embodiment of a round-shaped indexable cutting insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 8c depict an embodiment of a round-shaped indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 9c depict an embodiment of a groove or cut-off cutting insert according to the present disclosure, comprising three regions of composite materials.
a through 10c depict an embodiment of a spade drill insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a through 11c depict an embodiment of a spade drill insert having the design depicted in
a through 13c depict an embodiment of a ballnose cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials.
a and 15b depict an embodiment of a milling cutting insert according to the present disclosure, having a square shape and four rounded corners, and comprising two regions of composite materials.
a and 16b, respectively, are a picture and a sectioned view of a sample composite cutting tool insert having the composite structure in
The present disclosure describes unique composite articles such as, for example, composite cutting tool inserts, rotary cutting tool inserts, drilling inserts, milling inserts, spade drills, spade drill inserts, and ballnose inserts. Embodiments of the composite articles according to the present disclosure include a first composite material and a second composite material. In certain embodiments according to the present disclosure, each composite material individually comprises hard particles in a binder, and the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the first composite material is different from the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the second composite material. In certain non-limiting embodiments, composite articles according to the present disclosure comprise a first composite material including ruthenium in the binder, and a second composite material including a binder that either does not comprise ruthenium or comprises no more than an incidental concentration of ruthenium in the binder.
The composite articles according to the present disclosure present may be contrasted with the subject matter of U.S. Pat. No. 6,511,265, which issued in January 2003 and relates to composite carbide rotary tools, and pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/206,368, which relates to methods for manufacturing composite carbide cutting inserts. Certain composite articles according to the present disclosure differ from the subject matter of the '265 patent and '368 application for at least the reason that the present disclosure describes unique composite structures including at least a first and second composite materials, wherein each composite material individually comprises hard particles in a binder and the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the first composite material is different from the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the second composite material.
Including ruthenium in the binder phase of cemented carbides has been found to provide improved resistance to thermal cracking in cutting tools and cutting tool inserts during machining operations, reduced propagation of cracks along and beyond the cutting edges, reduced propagation of cracks into the substrate, as well as other benefits. Cemented hard particles in a binder wherein the binder comprises ruthenium are referred to herein as “ruthenium featured carbides”. Ruthenium may be present in any quantity effective to have a beneficial effect on the properties of the cutting tool, cutting tool insert, or other article. Examples of useful concentrations of ruthenium in the binder include, for example, from 1% to 30%, by weight based on the total weight of the binder. In certain embodiments, the concentration of ruthenium in the binder may be from 3% to 25% by weight; or from 8% to 20% by weight, all based on the total weight of the binder.
Although adding ruthenium can provide significant benefits, as noted above, it is an expensive alloying constituent. In that regard, certain non-limiting embodiments of composite articles, such as, for example, cutting tools and cutting tool inserts, according to the present disclosure may include ruthenium in the binder of only those regions of the article that can benefit from the advantages that the presence of ruthenium provides in cutting operations. The concentration of ruthenium in other regions of the article, regions that would not significantly benefit from the presence of ruthenium in the binder of those regions, may be zero, or may be reduced relative to other regions. Accordingly, for example, the present disclosure comprehends a composite article including different regions of cemented carbides having varying levels of ruthenium in the regions' binders. Ruthenium preferably is included in relatively high concentrations in the binder of regions of the article that will benefit from the improved properties afforded by the presence of ruthenium in such regions. Ruthenium preferably is absent, is present only in incidental amounts, or is present in relatively low concentrations in the binder of regions of the article that will not significantly benefit from the improved properties afforded by the presence of ruthenium in such regions.
In certain non-limiting embodiments of the composite articles according to the present disclosure, the ruthenium concentration of the binder of the first composite material and the ruthenium concentration of the binder of the second composite material differ by at least 1 weight percent, at least 5 weight percent, or at least 10 weight percent, wherein such differences are determined by subtracting the lower ruthenium concentration from the higher ruthenium concentration. Certain embodiments of composite cutting tools and cutting tool inserts fabricated with regions having varying binder concentrations of ruthenium, for example, can reduce the usage of ruthenium by 40% to 90% (by weight) relative to monolithic articles, wherein the concentration of ruthenium is uniform throughout the article. Thus, constructing composite articles, such as cutting tools and cutting tool inserts, according to the present disclosure can significantly reduce the cost to produce such articles, and without sacrificing desired cutting properties.
Embodiments of composite articles according to the present disclosure, for example, composite inserts, may include chip forming geometries on one or both of the articles' top and bottom surfaces. The chip forming geometry of the composite article may be, for example, a complex chip forming geometry. A complex chip forming geometry may be any geometry that has various configurations on the tool rake face, such as lumps, bumps, ridges, grooves, lands, backwalls, or combinations of two or more such features.
As used herein, “composite article” or “composite cutting tool” refers to an article or cutting tool having discrete regions of composite materials differing in one or more characteristics selected from physical properties, chemical properties, chemical composition, and microstructure. For purposes of this definition, a coating applied to an article, cutting tool, or cutting tool insert is not considered to alone constitute a “region”. Also, as used herein, a “composite material” is a material that includes two or more substantially homogenously distributed phases. An example of a composite material is a cemented carbide, which includes a particulate ceramic material in a binder. In certain embodiments according to the present disclosure, a first region of composite material includes ruthenium in the binder (a “ruthenium featured composite material”); and a second region of composite material does not comprise ruthenium (a “non-ruthenium featured composite material”). In certain embodiments of composite articles according to the present disclosure, the characteristic that differs between the discrete regions is at least one of hardness, tensile strength, wear resistance, fracture toughness, modulus of elasticity, corrosion resistance, coefficient of thermal expansion, and coefficient of thermal conductivity.
Composite inserts that may be constructed as provided in the present disclosure include, for example, inserts for turning, threading, grooving, milling, slot milling, end milling, face milling, drilling, reaming, countersinking, counterboring, and tapping of materials. There may be boundaries between the regions of such articles that differ in one or more characteristics. The boundaries between the regions, however, typically are not clear, discrete, planar boundaries due to the nature of the manufacturing process and the powdered metals. During powder addition into a die or mold in certain methods that may be used to form composite articles according to the present disclosure, for example, there may be some mixing of the powdered metal grades near the regions of interface between the grades. Therefore, as used herein, reference to “boundaries” or a “boundary” between two regions of composite materials refers to a general boundary region between the two regions, wherein the two regions constitute predominantly one or the other composite material. Further, during sintering of pre-sintered compacts comprising two or more regions, there may be some diffusion of materials between the regions.
Certain non-limiting embodiments according to the present disclosure are directed to composite articles, such as, for example, composite cutting tool inserts, including at least one cutting edge and at least two regions of composite materials that differ with respect to at least one characteristic. Certain embodiments of composite inserts according to the present disclosure may be indexable and/or comprise chip forming geometries. The differing characteristics of the two or more regions of composite material result from at least a difference in ruthenium concentration in binder phases included in the two regions, but also may be a result of variation in other characteristics of the regions such as variations in chemical composition (in addition to ruthenium concentration) and microstructure. The chemical composition of a particular region is a function of, for example, the chemical composition of the ceramic component and/or binder of the region, and the carbide-to-binder ratio of the region.
Composite articles according to the present disclosure may be produced by any known method of producing composite materials. Examples of such methods include the method of producing a composite article described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/206,368, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Examples of the first and second composite materials included in articles according to the present disclosure may individually comprise hard particles in a binder. The hard particles in each of the composite materials may independently comprise, for example, at least one of a carbide, a nitride, a boride, a silicide, an oxide, and a solid solution of two more of these, and the binder material may comprise, for example, at least one of cobalt, nickel, iron, and alloys of these metals. In certain non-limiting embodiments, the hard particles may comprise a metal carbide, wherein the metal of the metal carbide is selected from any carbide forming element, such as, for example, titanium, chromium, vanadium, zirconium, hafnium, molybdenum, tantalum, tungsten, and niobium. Also, in certain non-limiting embodiments, the metal carbide of the first composite material differs from the metal carbide of the second composite material in at least one of chemical composition and average grain size. The binder material of the first composite material and the binder of the second composite material may each individually comprise, for example, one or more of cobalt, cobalt alloy, nickel, nickel alloy, iron, and iron alloy. In certain embodiments, the first composite material and the second composite material may individually comprise from 2 to 40 weight percent of the binder and from 60 to 98 weight percent of a metal carbide, based on the total weight of the material. The binder of the first carbide grade and the binder of the second carbide grade may differ in the concentration of ruthenium in the binder and may also differ in other aspects, such as chemical composition, weight percentage of binder in the carbide material, metal grade, or both. In some embodiments, the first material includes ruthenium in a concentration that is from 1 to 10, or from 5 to 20, weight percent more than the concentration of ruthenium in the second material. The two of more powdered cemented carbide grades in a particular article according to the present disclosure may comprise ruthenium in the binder, but in embodiments comprising multiple regions of ruthenium featured composite materials, the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of one region may be different from the ruthenium concentration in a different region, but may be substantially similar to the concentration of ruthenium in any other region.
A necessarily limited number of examples of composite articles according to the present disclosure are provided below. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the following discussion of embodiments according to the present disclosure may be adapted to the fabrication of composite inserts having complex geometries and/or more than two regions of composite materials. For example, certain embodiments of the composite articles according to the present disclosure may have 3, 4, 5, 6, or more regions of composite material, wherein each region differs from at least one other region in the article in at least one characteristic. The following discussion of certain embodiments is not intended to restrict the invention, but merely to illustrate certain possible embodiments.
Embodiments of composite articles according to the present disclosure, such as embodiments of cutting tool inserts, may be produced at lower cost than conventional articles. Cost savings may be obtained by providing ruthenium in regions of the article that will benefit from the presence of ruthenium when the article is in use, while eliminating or limiting the concentration of ruthenium in other regions wherein the benefits of ruthenium may not be exploited to significant advantage when the article is in use. Another advantage of certain embodiments of composite articles, such as certain composite cutting tool inserts, according to the present disclosure is the flexibility available to the tool designer to tailor characteristics of different regions of the composite articles to adapt the articles to specific cutting applications. For example, the size, location, thickness, geometry, and/or physical properties of an individual cemented carbide material in one region of a cutting insert according to the present disclosure may be selected to suit a specific machining application.
As used herein, a “core region” of a composite article in the form of a cutting tool insert refers to a portion of the insert generally including the center of the insert. As used herein, a “core region” of a composite article in the form of a drill insert refers to a core portion including the cutting edge subjected to the lowest cutting speeds, which typically is the cutting edge that is closest to the axis of rotation. As used herein, a “surface region” of a cutting tool insert includes all or a portion of the surface of the insert. As used herein, a “surface region” of a drill insert includes the surface of the cutting edge subjected to the higher cutting speeds, which typically is a cutting edge that is relatively far from the axis of rotation. In certain insert embodiments, the core region includes a portion of the surface of the insert.
Certain non-limiting embodiments of composite inserts according to the present disclosure may have a surface region of a carbide material comprising ruthenium in the binder to provide the surface region with improved wear resistance, and a core region of a relatively tougher carbide material to increase shock or impact resistance of the core region. In such embodiments, the core regions may or may not include a binder comprising ruthenium, and if ruthenium is present in the core region the concentration of ruthenium in the binder of the core region is different from the concentration of ruthenium in the surface region. In this way, characteristics of different regions of an insert according to the present disclosure may be optimized to address the conditions to which the regions are subjected during use of the insert to machine materials. Therefore, for example, composite indexable carbide cutting tool inserts made according to the present disclosure may be designed to achieve the objectives of reduced manufacturing cost (through a reduction in overall ruthenium content relative to monolithic inserts) and improved machining performance (by tailoring one or more characteristics of core and surface regions, for example).
Certain embodiments of cutting tools and cutting tool inserts according to the present disclosure may comprise a coating applied by, for example, PVD and/or CVD methods. Embodiments of coatings may include, for example, at least one of a metal carbide, a metal nitride, a metal boride, and a metal oxide of a metal selected from groups IIIA, IVB, VB, and VIB of the periodic table. More specific non-limiting examples of coatings that may be included on, for example, cutting tools and cutting tool inserts according to the present disclosure include hafnium carbon nitride and, for example, may also comprise one or more of titanium nitride (TiN), titanium carbonitride (TiCN), titanium carbide (TiC), titanium aluminum nitride (TiAlN), titanium aluminum nitride plus carbon (TiAlN+C), aluminum titanium nitride (AlTiN), aluminum titanium nitride plus carbon (AlTiN+C), titanium aluminum nitride plus tungsten carbide/carbon (TiAlN+WC/C), aluminum titanium nitride (AlTiN), aluminum titanium nitride plus carbon (AlTiN+C), aluminum titanium nitride plus tungsten carbide/carbon (AlTiN+WC/C), aluminum oxide (Al2O3), α-alumina oxide, titanium diboride (TiB2), tungsten carbide carbon (WC/C), chromium nitride (CrN), aluminum chromium nitride (AlCrN), hafnium carbon nitride (HfCN), zirconium nitride (ZrN), zirconium carbon nitride (ZrCN), boron nitride (BN), and boron carbon nitride (BCN).
An example of one embodiment of a cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure is shown in
a through 2c illustrate a composite indexable cutting tool insert 11 according to the present disclosure having a square shape with built-in chip breakers 12 on the top side, four cutting edges 13, four round cutting edges 14, and a center hole 15. The cutting insert 11 may be indexed four times.
Embodiments of composite carbide indexable cutting tool inserts are not limited to cutting tool inserts 1 and 11 shown in
a through 3c depict aspects of a composite indexable cutting tool insert 21 with built-in chip breakers 25 on both the top and bottom sides. The cutting tool insert 21 has a diamond shape and can be indexed four times (two times on each side).
A further embodiment of a cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure is shown in
a through 5d depict a further embodiment of a composite indexable cutting tool insert according to the present disclosure, with built-in chip breakers on both top and bottom sides. The cutting insert 41 has a diamond shape and may be indexed four times (two times on each side). As shown in
It should be emphasized that the shape of indexable cutting tool inserts according to the present disclosure may be any positive or negative geometrical style known to those of ordinary skill, and optionally may include any desired chip forming geometry.
a through 6c show an irregular-shaped milling insert 51 according to the present disclosure including two different composite materials: a ruthenium featured carbide material 52, and a non-ruthenium featured carbide material 53. The cutting tool insert 51 has a built-in or pressed-in chip breaker geometry 54. The boundary 55 between the ruthenium featured carbide material 52 and the non-ruthenium featured carbide material 53 is generally perpendicular to the axis 56 of pressing of the powder grades when forming the insert 51.
a through 7c illustrate a round shape general purpose cutting tool insert 61 with two different carbide materials 67 and 68. The cutting insert 61 has a flat top surface 62.
a through 8c show a round shape general purpose cutting tool insert 71 according to the present disclosure, with two regions 77 and 78. The cutting insert 71 has a built-in or pressed-in chip breaker geometry 72, cutting edge 73, center hole 74, bottom face 75, and angled wall 76. Region 77 comprises a ruthenium featured carbide material, and region 78 comprises a non-ruthenium featured carbide material. Boundary 79 is shown perpendicular to axial line A. it will be understood, however, there may not be a clear and consistent boundary between regions 77 and 78 due to, for example, mixing and/or diffusion at boundary 79.
a through 9c show a composite grooving or cut-off cutting tool insert 81 according to the present disclosure including a ruthenium featured carbide 82 and a non-ruthenium featured carbide 83. The cutting tool insert 81 has a built-in or pressed-in chip breaker geometry 84. Boundary 85 is between the ruthenium featured carbide and non-ruthenium featured carbide material. In this embodiment, the boundary 85 is in the same direction as the movement of the top and bottom punches used in a carbide power pressing technique.
Embodiments of composite constructions according to the present disclosure may include relatively complex composite constructions comprising multiple boundaries between regions of different cemented carbide materials. Certain of the boundaries may be substantially perpendicular to the axial line of pressing of the article, while other boundaries may be substantially parallel to the pressing axial line.
a through 10c show an embodiment of a composite spade drill insert 90 according to the present disclosure. Insert 90 has a composite construction of ruthenium featured carbide materials at regions 92 and 93 and a different ruthenium featured carbide material or a non-ruthenium featured carbide material in region 91. The composite cutting tool insert 90 has the shape and geometry of a drilling insert that is usually referred to as a spade drill insert. The composite drilling insert shown in the perspective view of
A composite drilling insert may be constructed in different ways depending on the specific drilling applications. Shown in
a through 13c depict an embodiment of a ball nose cutting insert according to the present disclosure, comprising two regions of composite materials. The ballnose cutting insert 110 includes a region 113 comprising a ruthenium featured carbide, and a region 114 comprising a non-ruthenium featured carbide. The ballnose insert 110 includes a center hole 112 and a chip breaker 111. The boundary 115 separates the region 113 and the region 114 and may be described as substantially parallel to the axial line A of the center hole 112.
a and 15b depict an embodiment of a milling cutting insert according to the present disclosure with a square shape comprising two regions of differing composite materials. The cutting tool insert 121 has four round corners 122, an angled wall 127, and built-in chip breakers 128. Boundary 125 separates the top region 123, containing a ruthenium featured carbide with X44 substrate, and the bottom region 124, containing a non-ruthenium featured carbide with H91 substrate. The boundary 125, as demonstrated in the cross-section of
According to ISO standards for the substrate grade of carbide cutting tool materials, X44 is close to a tough grade between P25 to P50. Powder ingredients (in weight percentages of total powder weight) for X44 are shown in Table 1. The major ingredients include WC, TiC, TaC, NbC, Co and Ru. Certain typical mechanical properties for the sintered X44 tungsten carbides are also listed in Table 1.
The non-ruthenium featured carbide H91 is a tough milling grade. Powder ingredients for H91 are shown in Table 2. H91 is a carbide substrate without ruthenium. Certain mechanical properties for the sintered H91 tungsten carbides are also listed in Table 2.
A composite cutting tool insert may be produced combining the ruthenium featured carbide X44 and the non-ruthenium featured carbide H91 according to the composite construction illustrated in
It is to be understood that the present description illustrates those aspects of the invention relevant to a clear understanding of the invention. Certain aspects of the invention that would be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art and that, therefore, would not facilitate a better understanding of the invention have not been presented in order to simplify the present description. Although only a limited number of embodiments of the present invention necessarily are described herein, one of ordinary skill in the art will, upon considering the foregoing description, recognize that many modifications and variations of the invention may be employed. All such variations and modifications of the invention are intended to be covered by the foregoing description and the following claims.
This application is a continuation application of, and claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §120 to, co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/687,343, filed Mar. 16, 2007, which is incorporated by reference.
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