This application claims priority to International Patent Application No. PCT/GB2017/053773 filed on Dec. 15, 2017, which claims priority to GB Patent Application No. 1621699.6 filed on Dec. 16, 2016, both of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for shaping workpieces, and is particularly concerned with shaping workpieces using tools which have a flexible working surface and are pressed against a workpiece to form a tool footprint by deforming the surface of the tool against the workpiece, and are rotated about an axis inclined to the workpiece surface so that the working surface of the tool within the tool footprint is moving relative to the workpiece surface. The tool footprint is moved over the workpiece surface by relative movement of the tool and the workpiece, so that the tool footprint reaches all parts of the surface to be worked. At the tool footprint, an abrasive working surface of the tool removes material from the workpiece to produce the required workpiece shape and finish.
In one aspect of the invention the shaping tool comprises a flexible tool surface on which are arrayed a number of substantially rigid pellets, into which abrasive particles are embedded. For tools of this type, an aspect of the invention provides a method of determining tool control parameters which, when applied in a shaping process, ensure that the shaping process is able to remove material from the workpiece at the largest possible rates, while doing so under ductile cutting conditions which result in reduced sub-surface damage and improved surface finish quality.
A further aspect of the invention provides a system in which data representing the surface form of the workpiece is analysed in order either to select a tool able to perform the required shaping and/or finishing operation from a range of standard spherical tools, or to determine the required geometry of a non-standard tool to perform the required shaping and/or finishing operation. The workpiece surface data may further be analysed in order to produce tool control data including a tool path for moving the tool footprint over the workpiece.
A further aspect of the invention provides manufacturing of tools for use in the shaping process, including methods and apparatus for pre-conditioning the abrasive working surface of the tool.
A further aspect of the present invention relates to a system for monitoring tool wear as a result of the tool being used in shaping operations, in order to identify when a tool is nearing, or has reached, the end of its usable life.
Aspects and embodiments of the invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
An overview of the workpiece shaping system, showing the stages in a workpiece shaping operation, is set out in
Typically the shaping operation carried out using the system of the present invention will be a shaping and finishing operation to bring a roughly-formed workpiece to its final, required, shape and finish. The workpiece which is shaped by the shaping operation may then be incorporated in a final product, as outlined in the flowchart of
Referring now to
The tool form and tool path generator 14 also receives available tool data from a database 16, representing the identities of tools which have already been used for some shaping processes, but are not at the end of their working life. A database of standard tool data 18 representing the forms of standard tools is also available to the tool form and toolpath generator 14. On the basis of this accumulated data, the tool form and tool path generator 14 performs various functions.
One function of the tool path generator 14 is to determine, by comparing the CAD data 10 and the measurement data 12 at step 201 (
The tool form and tool path generator 14 then analyses the required shape of the workpiece at step 202 to determine a form (shape) of tool which is able to treat all of the areas of the workpiece. This determination may involve a selection (step 203) from the used tools which are available (represented by available tool data 16 stored in database 250), or it may be a selection from a standard range of tools (based on the standard tool data 18 stored in database 250), or in some cases a non-standard tool form may be required and a bespoke tool will have to be produced.
After selecting or generating the shape and size (form) of the tool required to treat all of the workpiece surface, the tool form and tool path generator 14 then generates at step 204 a tool path which describes the movement required of the tool over the workpiece in order to remove the material from the workpiece to bring it to the required shape and finish.
The combination 15 of tool path data and either the identity of an available tool, or a new standard or bespoke tool is then provided to a shaping apparatus 20.
In the final step the workpiece is shaped by the shaping apparatus 20 moving the tool over the workpiece along the determined tool path to arrive at the required shape for the workpiece. The finished workpiece may form part of a final product, or may be a mould cavity in which a component is moulded for later incorporation into a final product.
Generating the Tool Path
The tool path data will include the three-dimensional components of the movement of the tool relative to the workpiece. The tool path will thus define the tool “offset”, i.e. the amount of deformation of the tool against the workpiece surface which defines the size of the tool footprint, at each point along the tool path. The tool path data may also define the speed of translation of the tool across the workpiece surface, which may be constant or which may vary at different parts of the tool path, and optionally also include data concerning a rotational speed of the tool and a precession angle of the tool rotation axis relative to the tool footprint on the workpiece surface.
An important check to perform during the generation of the tool path is the collision check, step 205. This step simulates the shaping operation to ensure that at no time during the shaping operation does the tool stem or any other part of the tool mounting or the shaping machine collide with the workpiece. In the event of such a collision, the tool path generating software may vary the tool path by changing the tool attitude, or the design of the tool may be altered for example to reduce or reshape the tool stem, and calculates a new tool path at step 204. The generation of the tool path is an iterative process which eventually arrives at a combination of a tool profile and a tool path which can treat all of the parts of the surface, which avoids collision with the workpiece, and which provides a treatment time which is not excessive. Optionally, one of the inputs to the tool path generator may be a time limitation, specifying the maximum amount of time allowed for bringing the workpiece from its measured shape to the required shape.
The tool path generator then determines at step 206 the amount of wear dW that the tool will experience when performing this shaping operation, and verifies in steps 207 and 208 that the selected tool is capable of sustaining this amount dW of wear without exceeding a wear threshold TW indicative of the working life of the tool. The calculation of dW is based on the amount of material to be removed from the workpiece and the surface configuration of the tool. This check ensures that the tool will be able to complete the required shaping operation i.e. that the working surface of the tool will not become so worn during the shaping operation that the tool is unable to complete the operation.
If the sum of the amount of wear dW produced by the shaping operation and the existing wear of the tool will exceed the threshold TW value of the tool selected, then the tool path generator 14 selects an alternative tool form at step 209 and returns to step 204 to generate an alternative tool path to perform the required shaping operation.
When the tool path generator 14 arrives at a combination 15 of a tool selection and a tool path which can perform the required shaping operation without exceeding the wear threshold TW of the selected tool, the tool path generator 14 updates the database 250 at step 210. Then if the selected tool is one of the used tools available, then at step 212 the tool path data is provided to a shaping machine such as a CNC machining centre, together with the identity of the selected used tool. The machining centre then operates at step 20 to move the selected used tool over the workpiece following the tool path data in order to shape the workpiece.
If the selected tool is one of the standard range of tools available, then the tool path data is provided to the shaping machine at step 213, together with the identity of the selected standard tool. A standard tool may be provided to the machining centre, together with the tool path data, or the standard tool may be obtained from other sources. The machining centre then operates to move the selected standard tool over the workpiece following the tool path data in order to shape the workpiece.
If the tool path generator 14 is unable to generate a tool path which can be successfully followed by either an available used tool or a standard tool form, then the tool path generator will generate at step 203 a bespoke tool form and at step 204 a corresponding tool path for moving the bespoke tool over the workpiece to bring the workpiece to the required shape. The tool path generator 14 also calculates, at step 211, the threshold amount TW of tool wear that the bespoke tool can tolerate during its life, and feeds this to the database with the identity and form data for the bespoke tool. The bespoke tool is then manufactured at step 214 and provided to a shaping machine, together with the corresponding tool path data, and the shaping machine then operates to move the tool over the workpiece to shape the workpiece. The database is then updated to reflect the amount of wear suffered by the bespoke tool during the shaping operation.
The tool path generator 14 maintains a database 250 which stores identity data for each individual tool, and for each tool also stores data concerning the tool form and a threshold amount of tool wear TW which can be sustained by the tool during its working life, i.e. before the tool becomes unusable. This threshold amount of wear TW is calculated based on the surface area and the shape of the tool. The database also stores, for each tool, an accumulated amount W of tool wear corresponding to the shaping operations which the tool has performed since its production.
Tool Form Selection
In order to select the most appropriate tool to complete each shaping operation in the most efficient manner, the surface of the workpiece is analysed to determine the shape of tool required in order to shape and/or finish all parts of the workpiece surface. In the case of a spherical treatment tool, a large radius tool can achieve a large treatment footprint and thus the surface of the workpiece can be shaped and/or finished in a short treatment time. However, if the workpiece surface includes sharply curved concave areas, or edges where faces of the workpiece surface intersect at acute angles, then a large-radius spherical tool may not be able to treat these surface areas. If the radius of the tool is reduced, the tool is able to enter these sharply-curved regions of the workpiece surface, but since the tool footprint is correspondingly reduced then the time for treating the surface will be increased. Furthermore, since the overall surface area of the tool will be reduced, each part of the tool surface will wear away at a greater rate than would be the case with a larger-radius tool.
The area of the sample component to be shaped/finished comprises the internal surfaces of the recess 36. The area of the sample component to be treated is thus formed mainly by flat surfaces, namely the base 36 and the sides and ends 37 to 40 of the recess. A smaller proportion of the surface to be treated comprises the small-radius highly curved region R1 blending the sides 37 to 40 of the recess to the base 36, and the larger-radius curved regions R2 blending the end walls 39 and 40 to the sidewalls 37 and 38.
While it is advantageous to use one of a range of “standard” spherical or part-spherical tools, it is sometimes not possible to achieve an acceptable result with a spherical tool. For example if the workpiece has a surface which is predominantly flat but has sharp-radiussed internal corners, as is the case with the sample component of
In order to treat all of the internal surfaces of the recess of the sample component illustrated in
Workpiece Surface Analysis
The determination of the optimum shape and size of tool for the particular workpiece is made by an analysis of the workpiece surface data undertaken by a processor, using digital data representing the form (shape and dimensions) of the workpiece surface to be treated. This digital data 300 may be a CAD file defining the surface to be achieved. An explanation of the analysis now follows, with reference to
The first step in the analysis is to determine at step 301 the total area of the surface which requires treatment, as this defines a minimum radius for a spherical tool so as to provide sufficient surface area of abrasive material to be able to treat the surface area of the workpiece without wearing out the tool. In relation to the sample component illustrated in
A=lw+2ld+2wd
At step 302, the minimum radius for a spherical tool with sufficient surface area to treat this area of the workpiece surface is determined.
(1) For a given tool radius (TR [mm]) and tool offset (TO [mm]), the tool produces a tool footprint of diameter S1(TR,TO) [mm];
(2) By adding the tool hardness and workpiece hardness (TH, WH), a function RR to describe the material removal rate at each point along the tool path: RR(TR,TO,TH,WH) [mm3/min] is formulated;
(3) To avoid cusping, the track spacing TS (the distance between adjacent stretches of the tool path) should be such that the tool footprint is overlapped by at least 20 tracks: TS [mm]=S1/20.
(4) To maximize productivity, the machine should be running close to its maximum feed rate FMax [mm/min], which may be about 3000 mm/min:
(5) Comparing the measured workpiece to the ideal workpiece, a target material removal depth (WD [mm]) for each point on the workpiece area (WA [mm2]) is found. By summing these depths and areas, the total volume WV [mm3]=WD*WA of workpiece material to be removed is calculated.
(6) The total path length (PL [mm]) is a function of the workpiece area and track spacing: PL=WA/TS
The total volume of material to be removed can then be expressed as a function of the removal rate RR at each point along the tool path times the total length PL of the tool path:
The equation above is solved with TR expressed as function of FMax to give the minimum tool radius required for the tool to remove the material from the workpiece.
The second step in the analysis is to find, at step 303, the minimum radius of curvature of internal corners of the workpiece surface. This step establishes the maximum possible radius of a spherical tool which can treat the entire surface area, i.e. a tool which can enter the internal corners of the workpiece and engage all of the surface. For the example component illustrated in
The third step 305 is to compare the determined maximum radius of the tool from step 304 with the minimum radius determined in step 302. If the maximum radius from step 304 is greater than the minimum radius from step 302, then a spherical tool with a radius between these two limits is able to treat the entire surface area without wearing out the tool. There may be one or more “standard” size spherical tools whose radii are within this range.
Internal Edges
At step 306 the minimum angle of the internal edges of the workpiece surface is determined from the CAD data 300.
In this case, the analysis proceeds to step 307 to determine whether a spherical tool T having a radius within this range of radii (preferably one of the “standard” size tools) will be able to treat internal edges of the workpiece, i.e. lines of intersection of adjacent faces of the workpiece where the angle between the faces is less than 180°. The radius of the tool must be such that the tool is able to exert sufficient pressure on the surface, or generate sufficient offset, to treat the surface at the edge without exceeding the maximum permitted pressure or offset at areas adjacent the edge.
The processing algorithm preferably tests first the “standard” tool sizes within the range at step 307, and selects the larger or largest radius tool from the successful candidates, i.e. the largest tool which can treat the internal edge E without exceeding the maximum permitted offset Imax. If all of the “standard” tool sizes within the range are too large to successfully treat the internal edges of the workpiece, the processing algorithm then determines whether a spherical tool with a radius at the lower limit of the range will be able to treat the internal edges. If it can, the processing algorithm may then iteratively proceed to determine the largest-radius spherical tool in the size range which can treat the internal edges of the workpiece. At step 307 the surface data analyser then provides to the tool form generator data identifying the largest-radius spherical tool which satisfies the criteria of treating the internal corners and the internal edges of the workpiece, and is large enough to treat the entire workpiece area without wearing out the tool.
If the comparison in step 305 determines that the maximum radius from step 304 (the maximum radius for a spherical tool which will treat the internal curves of the workpiece) is less than the minimum radius from step 302 (the minimum size spherical tool which will be able to complete the shaping process), then the largest spherical tool able to treat the internal corners of the workpiece has insufficient working surface area to treat the entire surface area without wearing out the tool. In such a case, the processing proceeds to step 310 as a non-spherical tool is required in order to simultaneously provide sufficient working surface area to treat the entire workpiece and to provide one or more sharply-radiused ridge portions to treat the internal corners of the workpiece. In one embodiment, such a tool has a spherical region of sufficiently large radius to provide sufficient working surface area of the tool, and one or more annular regions or ridges whose tips are of sufficiently small radius to treat the internal corners of the workpiece.
Non-Spherical Tool
In both of the non-spherical tools illustrated, the ridges 54, 55 and 59 are used to treat internal corners and/or edges of the workpiece which the part-spherical regions 51 and 56 are unable to effectively process. The tool is held against the workpiece at an appropriate orientation such that the ridges 54, 55 or 59 can engage with the internal edges and/or corners of the workpiece in order to treat these parts. For the flatter areas of the workpiece surface which require treatment, the tool is held so that the part-spherical surface 51 or 56 engages the workpiece surface.
The tools are formed from resilient material such as rubber or synthetic elastomers, and in some embodiments the working surfaces of the tools are covered with an array of substantially rigid pellets in which abrasive material is embedded. Such pelleted tools can be used without the need for an abrasive slurry in conjunction with the tool. In other embodiments, the working surface of the tool is the rubber or synthetic elastomer material of the tool, and the tool is used in conjunction with an abrasive slurry
The profile of the tool, for example the extent of the part-spherical portion of the tool which is determined by the angle a subtended at the centre by the part-spherical portion of the tool, may be selected on the basis of data correlating surface curvature with the area of the surface having that curvature. This data may be presented in the form of a histogram such as is seen in
The total areas of the parts R1, R2 and R3 of the component surface are added together to determine the amount of area to be treated, and this establishes the minimum radius of a spherical tool able to treat the workpiece, on the basis of the available working surface area of the tool.
For a non-spherical tool, the angle a which determines how much of the tool surface is part-spherical depends on the ratio of the total area in the histogram which is above the minimum tool radius, to the total area in the histogram which is below the minimum tool radius. In the present example, this ratio is expressed as:
R3:(R1+R2)
The value of “a” should be such that the proportion of tool surface area that is spherical is the same as the proportion of workpiece surface area that will be polished by this spherical part of the tool. For example, if the spherical part of the tool is to be used to treat half of the workpiece surface area, then the value of a should be set so that half of the working surface of the tool is spherical in form. If most of the area to be treated is flat, then the angle a is larger, to provide a large part-spherical tool working surface for treating the flat areas. If most of the area to be treated is comprised of sharp internal corners then the angle a is smaller and the part-spherical portion of the tool is smaller so that all parts of the tool working surface are exposed to substantially equal amounts of wear during the shaping process. This step corresponds to step 309 in
At step 310 the requirements of the non-spherical tool form are established by determining what proportion of the tool should be spherical in shape, what radius that spherical part should have, and whether the tool requires one or more ridges or edges of small radius in order to treat sharply curved parts of the workpiece. When these requirements are determined, the profile of the tool can be established.
Tool Production
A shaping tool for use in the process of the present invention may comprise a part-spherical resilient surface on which is disposed a flexible sheet bearing an array of substantially rigid pellets in which abrasive material such as diamond is embedded. Typically, the pellets are approximately disc-shaped and the diameter of each pellet is approximately 0.5 mm, and the centres of adjacent pellets are arranged approximately 0.75 mm apart so as to leave a gap of about 0.25 mm between adjacent pellets. The pellets may be of different shapes, such as rectangular, hexagonal or triangular, and may be arranged in different patterns over the working surface of the tool. The pellets on a tool surface may be of several different shapes, and may be arranged in annular regions where each region contains pellets of one or more particular shape.
Examples of abrasive particles used in the pellets are diamond, cubic boron nitride (CBN), alumina and silica. Diamond particles are indicated for shaping hard ceramic materials such as silicon carbide or tungsten carbide. For shaping metals such as steel, CBN particles may be preferred, while for shaping soft materials such as glass then alumina or silica particles may be used. Other abrasive materials may be used as appropriate, for shaping particular workpiece materials. The particle size of the abrasives may be from 1 to 100 μm. Preferably, the particle size of the abrasives is from 3 to 15 μm, and a particle size of 9 μm for a diamond abrasive, held in a nickel or resin pellet matrix, has been found to be particularly effective for shaping silicon carbide.
It is however also possible to use a resilient tool with a smooth surface, in combination with a grinding slurry. The grinding slurry may contain abrasive particles of from 1 to 9 μm in diameter, suspended in an aqueous medium. The abrasive particles may be of cerium oxide, aluminium oxide or diamond, or any other suitable abrasive material appropriate to the material of the workpiece being shaped.
Manufacture
The shaped tool may be used to shape the workpiece by applying the tool to the workpiece surface in combination with an abrasive slurry.
In particularly advantageous embodiments, the working surface of the tool is covered with a flexible sheet of material carrying a number of rigid pellets, the pellets containing abrasive particles. To form the working surface of the tool, a suitable shape is cut from a sheet 60 of pelleted material. The shape may have a generally circular central area 506 and a number of lobes or “petals” 507 radiating out from the central area 506, the shape and dimensions of the central area 506 and the petals 507 being such that they can be wrapped around the profiled tool 505 to cover or substantially cover its working surface. Other shapes are possible for the pelleted sheet, provided that they can be folded to cover the working surface of the tool. For example, if the tool simply has a part-spherical working surface which subtends a small angle a at the centre of the sphere, then a circular shape without “petals” may be suitable.
The cut sheet of pelleted material and the tool 505 are then placed between two mould halves 508 and 509 as seen in
The tool is then released from the mould, and checked to ensure that the pelleted working surface conforms to the required surface profile of the tool. A further shaping or dressing step may be required to ensure that the tool conforms to the required shape, for example by removing some material from the pellets using a grinding wheel or other shaping tool.
For both pelleted and non-pelleted tools, a tool identification code can then be applied to the tool, this code optionally also including information regarding a nominal tool size, a preferred precession angle for operating the tool, maximum expected tool life and maximum tool offset in use, as well as any other relevant information for the user such as whether the tool is required to be used with or without a grinding slurry, and the preferred characteristics of such a grinding slurry.
Tool Conditioning
In order to prepare the pelleted tool for use, it is necessary to condition the working surfaces of the pellets. The conditioning cycle may be performed after the tool has been produced, by rotating and manipulating the tool while pressing it against a conditioning surface, so that each part of the working surface of the tool contacts the conditioning surface for a time sufficient to alter the working surfaces of the pellets until the surface structure of the pellets stabilises, and the rate at which material is removed from the conditioning surface becomes substantially constant.
Alternatively, the flexible sheet may be conditioned prior to cutting the sheet 60 to the required shape for applying to the tool during manufacture. The uncut sheet may be conditioned as illustrated in
The conditioning operation may take up to 15 or 30 minutes, or possibly longer. As an alternative to measuring lateral force on the puck 62 or conditioning block 66, the rate at which material is removed from the puck 62 or the conditioning block 66 may be measured at intervals during the conditioning cycle, and the conditioning cycle may be terminated when the removal rate becomes stable.
The pre-conditioned sheets or belts of mesh may then be cut into the required shape to cover a tool body, for example by stamping the mesh sheets in a die or by cutting the sheets using any suitable cutting tool or means.
The pre-conditioned cut mesh sheet may then be applied to the tool, for example by placing the mesh sheets into a mould, introducing the tool into the mould and vulcanising the tool and mesh together as described in relation to
The objective of the conditioning process is to shape the abrasive particles in the pellets so that they have a flattened exposed surface and a slightly tilted attitude, with a debris pocket at the front and binder up-stand at the back.
Structure of Conditioned Tool
Control to Ensure Ductile Grinding
For a fluid-filled tool, holding the tool in the same position relative to the workpiece, and increasing the fluid pressure within the tool, results in the pellets 84 being pressed against the workpiece surface S with increased force, but does not increase the area of the tool footprint. For a solid tool made from elastic material, increasing the offset Ir not only increases the area of the tool footprint in contact with the workpiece surface, but also increases the force with which the pellets are pressed against the workpiece surface.
During the shaping operation, the tool is moved in translation over the workpiece surface at a controlled “feed” speed of from 10 to 1000 mm/minute, preferably about 150 mm/minute. The tool is rotated about the spindle axis H at between about 50 and 1500 rpm.
During movement of the tool over the workpiece, the size of the tool footprint is varied by adjusting the “offset” distance Ir between the surface of the workpiece and the centre of the part-spherical surface of the tool. The force with which the tool is pressed against the workpiece is either controlled by controlling the fluid pressure inside the cup of the tool, or by adjusting the offset. The tool rotation speed and the angle P and direction of the precession axis are also controlled, and in conjunction with the tool footprint Fp and pressure determine the instantaneous rate at which material is removed from the workpiece at any point along the tool path. By controlling the tool “feed” speed, the time which the tool spends at each point along the tool path is controlled and thus the amount of material removed from each point along the tool path is determined.
Control of the direction of the precession axis determines the relative direction of movement of the tool to the workpiece at each point on the tool path. The control of the instantaneous direction in which the pellets move over the surface may be effected with the objective that polishing artefacts (grooves, ridges) are not left in the workpiece surface, for example by continuously varying the direction of relative movement of the pellets and the workpiece. Alternatively, the direction of movement of the pellets over the surface may be controlled such that any polishing marks left on the surface are aligned in a particular direction or directions. The “feed” speed at which the tool moves along the tool path is also controlled, to ensure that the required amount of material is removed at each point along the path, and the required surface finish is achieved.
Determining Tool Offset
As the pressure exerted by the abrasive particles on the workpiece increases, the cutting regime of the particles changes from a ductile regime in which material is removed with minimal cracking and sub-surface damage to the workpiece, to a “brittle” cutting regime in which surface cracks and sub-surface damage appear.
A method for determining the maximum possible offset which maintains a ductile cutting regime is illustrated in
This test method is suitable both for pelleted tools and for tools shaped from an elastomer blank. For pelleted tools, the test is carried out after conditioning of the tool. For non-pelleted tools, the test is carried out by firstly pressing the tool into dry abrasive powder to embed abrasive particles into the surface of the tool, and the tool is then drawn across the test surface as the tool offset is increased. The analysis of the results is the same in both cases.
By inspecting the walls of the indentations to determine how much of the indentations are fractured, and correlating this measurement with the amount of offset applied to the tool at the point where the indentations were made, the amount of offset Imax which results in the threshold percentage of fracturing of the walls of the indentations can be determined. This inspection may be carried out by capturing images of the indentations, and using image processing to analyse the edges of the indentations and calculate the percentage of the edges which are smooth and linear, and the percentage which are fractured and irregular. By taking such measurements at various locations along the test path, and correlating the measurements with the amount of offset at each location, a test processor can establish the relationship between the amount of offset and the percentage of fractured edges, and can establish the amount of offset at which the cutting regime changes from ductile cutting to brittle cutting as the percentage of fractured edges passes a predetermined threshold, for example 10%.
This data is then used in the tool path generation process to ensure that at all points along the tool path this maximum offset Imax is not exceeded and thus the shaping process is carried out with ductile cutting of the workpiece. The tool path may be optimised so that the value of the offset at any point along the tool path is maximised up to the limit of ductile cutting, or alternatively the tool path may be calculated such that the value of the offset does not exceed a particular proportion, for example 80%, of the maximum permissible offset for ductile cutting.
Tool Wear Monitoring
The tool path generator determines the amount of wear dW that the tool will experience when performing this shaping operation. The tool path generator first calculates the total amount of material to be removed from the workpiece and the surface configuration of the tool, based on the measurement data representing the initial form of the workpiece, and the CAD data representing the final form. Using this information and a “Grinding Ratio” which depends on the relative hardnesses of the workpiece and the working surface of the tool, the amount of wear dW that the tool will suffer when performing this shaping operation can be determined. The “Grinding Ratio”, i.e. the ratio between material removed from the workpiece and wear of the grinding tool may be determined experimentally for particular tool/workpiece combinations.
Optimising Tool Pressure
With a spherical tool of uniform hardness or elasticity, the pressure exerted by the tool at each point in the footprint varies according to a Hertzian distribution, with maximum pressure at the centre of the footprint. This is illustrated in
In the shaping process of the present invention, the pressure at each point in the tool footprint should also be such that abrasive particles in the working surface of the tool are pressed against the workpiece surface with a force which results in ductile cutting of the workpiece. The pressure at the centre of the footprint may result in the abrasive particles of the tool being pressed against the surface of the workpiece with sufficient force that brittle grinding takes place, resulting in sub-surface damage.
In order to reliably achieve ductile grinding over the entire area of the tool footprint, the pressure exerted by the tool over the footprint should be as uniform as possible.
In order to provide a more uniform pressure distribution over the tool footprint for a spherical tool, it is proposed to use a tool as illustrated in
In the tool illustrated in
Nested within the region A50 is a region A40 also of generally “L” shaped cross-section, and exposed on the surface adjacent the two areas of exposure of the portion A50. Filling the generally “L” shaped profile of the region A40 is a ring of material A30 which is exposed on the surface of the tool as a continuous band.
The ring A30 is formed from a softer material than the region A40, which in turn is softer than the region A50 which in turn is softer than the main body A60 of the tool. In one example, the Shore A hardnesses of the regions A50, A40, and a 30 may be 50, 40 and 30 respectively. The precise positioning of these regions will be such that at the intended precession angle with which the tool is to be used, the softest ring A30 passes across the centre of the tool footprint as the tool rotates relative to the workpiece.
When the tool is inclined so that the exposed part of region A30 extends across the centre of the tool footprint, the pressure at the centre of the footprint is reduced, due to the softness of the material, so that a substantially uniform pressure distribution across the entire tool footprint is achieved. This is illustrated in the plot below
The tool may be spherical or part-spherical, or may have a bespoke profile suited to a particular workpiece. The positions of the regions of differing hardness will depend on the intended precession angle of the tool. The regions may be produced by inlaying toroidal regions of material of different hardnesses within the spherical outline of the tool.
Alternatively, the tool may be produced by assembling concentric cylinders of materials of different hardnesses to form a tool blank from which the tool profile may be machined, as illustrated in
In a further alternative, the tool may be formed by a 3-D printing technique using different hardnesses of material for the different regions of the tool.
In a further alternative embodiment the tool may have a contoured supporting core over which varying depths of rubber are deposited to form a spherical tool surface, the differing depths of rubber between the core and the workpiece, as measured in radial directions of the spherical tool, producing a substantially constant contact pressure over the tool footprint at the design precession angle.
A shaping machine for shaping a workpiece using the tools and methods of the present invention is illustrated in
The shaping machine 1200 comprises a robust table 1201 resistant to vibrations. On the table 1201 there is mounted an X-slide mechanism 1202 for movement in the x direction. On the X-slide mechanism 1202 there is mounted a Y-slide mechanism 1203 for movement in the y direction. On the Y-slide mechanism 1203 there is mounted a turntable 1204 for rotation about the axis labelled c. The turntable 1204 is mounted on the Y-slide mechanism 1203 via a z movement mechanism (not shown) for movement of the turntable 1204 in the z direction. The turntable 1204 has a holding surface onto which a workpiece 1205 may be mounted for shaping and/or finishing. This arrangement provides for motion of the workpiece 1205 in four axes, namely linear movement in the x, y and z directions, and rotation about the c axis. It will be appreciated that in the arrangement shown, the rotation axis c is parallel to the movement axis z.
Also mounted to the table 1201 is a tool support arm 1206 which is generally “L” shaped, having a generally horizontal base part 1206a and a generally vertical upright 1206b.
The tool support arm is mounted to the table 1201 at the end of the base part 1206a remote from the upright 1206b for rotation about a vertical axis A. At the upper end of the upright 1206b a tool holder 1207 is mounted to the upright, so as to be rotatable relative to the upright about horizontal axis B. In the tool holder 1207, a rotary tool 1208 is mounted for rotation relative to the tool holder, about an axis H which is set at an angle to the axis B about which the tool holder 1207 rotates relative to the upright 1206b.
The rotary tool 1208 has a part-spherical working surface, which is arranged so that the rotation axes A, B and H coincide at the centre of the part-spherical surface. The arrangement is such that rotation of the tool arm 1206 about the axis A rotates the part-spherical surface without moving the tool in translation, and rotation of the tool holder 1207 about the axis H likewise does not move the tool in translation but merely alters the plane of the precession angle between the tool rotation axis B and the tool holder axis H.
Control of the movement of the workpiece in the x, y and z directions and rotation about the c axis, and control of the rotations of the tool arm 1206, the tool holder 1207 and the tool 1208 are affected by actuators and drives controlled by a processor apparatus 1209. The processor apparatus 1209 may include input means 1210 such as a keyboard, a port for external input signals or a disk drive, to receive process parameters and control instructions for controlling the motions of the workpiece and the tool. A display means 1211 may be provided to display information to the machine operator.
In operation, the shaping machine 1200 shapes the workpiece, using the determined tool path from the tool path generator 14 in combination with the selected or manufactured tool. The processor apparatus 1209 receives the tool path data from the tool path generator 14, the selected or manufactured tool 1208 is mounted in the tool holder 1207, and the processor apparatus 1209 controls the shaping machine 1200 to move the tool 1208 along the tool path relative to the workpiece in accordance with the tool path data.
The shaping machine 1200 may include a sensor to detect an identifying component and/or marking on the tool 1208, the sensor providing an output to the processor apparatus 1209 to ensure that the correct tool path is used to control movement of the tool 1208. The sensor may be an RFID sensor and the identifying component may be an RFID tag, or the sensor may be an optical detector to detect a marking such as a barcode or a QR code marked on the tool.
The tool path data received from the tool path generator 14 may include data identifying the tool to be used, and also may include data identifying the workpiece. The workpiece may be marked with an identifying tag such as a barcode or an RFID tag, which is readable by the or a sensor associated with the shaping machine 1200. The processor apparatus 1209 may be arranged so that the shaping operation can only take place if the identifying data of the tool and the workpiece coincides with identifying data received from the tool path generator 14. This will ensure that the correct tool, and tool path data, are used to shape the workpiece for which the tool path data has been calculated.
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1621699 | Dec 2016 | GB | national |
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PCT/GB2017/053773 | 12/15/2017 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/109501 | 6/21/2018 | WO | A |
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