{"id":23214,"date":"2025-01-03T16:48:22","date_gmt":"2025-01-03T08:48:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.meetyoucarbide.com\/?p=23214"},"modified":"2025-01-04T11:41:47","modified_gmt":"2025-01-04T03:41:47","slug":"carbide-tool-breakage","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.meetyoucarbide.com\/es\/carbide-tool-breakage\/","title":{"rendered":"4 Causes of Carbide Tool Breakage and Measures for Improving Tool Performance"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is mainly caused by mechanical wear from impurities in the workpiece material, hard particles such as carbides, nitrides, and oxides contained in the material matrix, and fragments of built-up edge. These hard particles scratch grooves on the tool surface. Abrasive wear by hard particles occurs in tools at all cutting speeds, but it is the main cause of wear in low-speed steel tools. At low cutting temperatures, other forms of wear are not significant. It is generally believed that the amount of wear caused by abrasive wear by hard particles is proportional to the relative sliding distance or cutting distance between the tool and the workpiece.<\/p>\n
Adhesion refers to the bonding phenomenon that occurs when the tool and workpiece material come into contact at atomic distances. It is a so-called cold welding phenomenon that occurs due to plastic deformation on the actual contact surface of the friction surfaces under sufficient pressure and temperature. It is the result of the adhesive force between the fresh surface atoms formed by the plastic deformation of the two friction surfaces. The adhesive points on the two friction surfaces are sheared or stretched and carried away by the opposite surface due to relative motion, which causes adhesive wear.<\/p>\n
Adhesive wear can occur on the contact surfaces between two materials, whether on the soft material side or the hard material side. Generally, the breakdown of adhesive points occurs more frequently on the side with lower hardness, i.e., the workpiece material. However, the tool material often has defects such as uneven structure, internal stresses, microcracks, pores, and local soft spots, so the carbide tool surface also frequently breaks and is carried away by the workpiece material, forming adhesive wear. High-speed steel, ceramic, cubic boron nitride, and diamond tools can all experience wear due to adhesion. The size of the carbide grains in cemented carbide has a significant impact on the speed of adhesive wear. The temperature at which the tool material and workpiece material adhere to each other greatly affects the severity of adhesive wear. Other factors such as the hardness ratio of the carbide tool to the workpiece material, the shape and structure of the tool surface, as well as cutting conditions and the stiffness of the process system, all affect adhesive wear.<\/p>\n
Due to the high temperatures during cutting, and the fact that the carbide tool surface is constantly in contact with the freshly cut surface, which has high chemical reactivity, the chemical elements of the two friction surfaces may diffuse into each other. This results in a change in the chemical composition of both, weakening the properties of the tool material and exacerbating the wear process. Diffusion wear increases with the rise in cutting temperature. For a given tool material, as the temperature increases, the rate of diffusion initially increases slowly and then accelerates. Different elements have different diffusion rates, so the severity of diffusion wear is greatly related to the chemical composition of the carbide tool material. Additionally, the rate of diffusion is also related to the flow velocity of the chip layer on the tool surface, which corresponds to the velocity of the chip flowing over the rake face. Slower flow velocity results in slower diffusion.<\/p>\n