Machinability of natural-fibre-reinforced polymer composites: Convectional vs ultrasonically-assisted machining

Wang, D., Onawumi, P. Y., Ismail, Sikiru O., Dhakal, Hom N., Popov, I., Silberschmidt, V. V. and Roy, A. (2019) Machinability of natural-fibre-reinforced polymer composites: Convectional vs ultrasonically-assisted machining. Composites Part A: Applied Science and Manufacturing, 119. 188–195. ISSN 1878-5840
Copy

Natural-fibre-reinforced polymer (NFRP) composites are becoming a viable alternative to synthetic fibre based composites in many industrial applications. Machining is often necessary to facilitate assembly of parts in a final product. This study focuses on a comparative experimental analysis of the effects of conventional drilling (CD) and a hybrid ultrasonically-assisted drilling (UAD) of a hemp fibre-reinforced vinyl ester composite laminate. The results obtained indicate that UAD is more efficient when compared to CD for a range of drilling conditions. It yields lower cutting forces and energy resulting in reduced machining-induced damage in the composite, including diminished burr formation and fibre pull-outs. The holes drilled with UAD exhibit improved surface finish and hole quality when compared to those produced with CD. The study demonstrates the applicability of UAD as a viable machining process for improved machinability of heterogeneous NFRP composite materials.


picture_as_pdf
Accepted_Manuscript_JCOMPA.pdf
subject
Submitted Version

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML Data Cite XML ASCII Citation HTML Citation OpenURL ContextObject MODS OpenURL ContextObject in Span METS MPEG-21 DIDL
Export

Downloads
?