An investigation of attritious and fracture wear of grinding wheels in precision grinding is described in a two paper sequence. Attritious wear, the subject of this first paper, refers to the dulling of the abrasive grain due to rubbing against the workpiece surface. The amount of dulling, measured by the area of the wear flats on the surface of the wheel, is found to be directly related to the grinding forces. In general, both the vertical and horizontal grinding force components increase linearly with the wear flat area. This is explained by considering the grinding force as the sum of a cutting force due to chip formation and a sliding force due to rubbing between the wear flats and workpiece. Related studies of wheel dressing, surface finish, and workpiece burn are also presented.
An experimental investigation is reported of the energy partition to the workpiece for grinding of steels with aluminum oxide and cubic boron nitride (CBN) abrasive wheels. The energy input to the workpiece was obtained by measuring the temperature distribution in the workpiece using an embedded thermocouple technique and matching the results with analytically computed values. It was found that 60-75 percent of the grinding energy is transported to the workpiece as heat with an aluminum oxide abrasive wheel, as compared to only about 20 percent with CBN wheels. An analysis of the results indicates that the much lower energy partition to the workpiece with CBN can be attributed to its very high thermal conductivity whereby a significant portion of the grinding heat is transported to the abrasive instead of to the workpiece. The much lower energy partition to the workpiece with CBN wheels results in much lower grinding temperatures and a greatly reduced tendency for thermal damage to the workpiece.
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