Author:
Iklodi Zsolt,Munoa Jokin,Dombovari Zoltan
Abstract
AbstractThis paper presents a detailed mathematical analysis of the effect of tooth distribution on the stability of broaching operations. Analytic and numeric techniques are employed to analyse a simplified one-degree-of-freedom mechanical model of variable pitch broaching, to assess its stability, and to find the optimal tooth distances maximizing robustness against harmful self-excited chatter vibrations. A novel modelling approach, considering a theoretical infinitely long broaching tool, draws parallels with variable pitch milling, and analytic formulas for tuning milling cutters are extended to broaching tools. For a further increase of robustness, and to take feasibility constraints into account, a goal function based on the semi-discretization and spectral collocation techniques is implemented in a direct numeric optimisation framework. A new, detailed derivation of the corresponding parameter gradients is presented to enable the use of gradient descent techniques. Since broaching is inherently a time-limited process, optimal parameters found in this manner are then validated via time domain simulations to show the desirable transient behaviours achievable by this ideal tuning of the tool geometry.
Funder
Horizon 2020
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC