Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB, R3T 5V6, Canada
Abstract
Abstract
For certain combinations of cutter spinning speeds and cutting depths in milling operations, self-excited vibrations or chatter of the milling tool are generated. The chatter deteriorates the surface finish of the workpiece and reduces the useful working life of the tool. In the past, extensive work has been reported on chatter detections based on the tool deflection and sound generated during the milling process, which is costly due to the additional sensor and circuitry required. On the other hand, the manual intervention is necessary to interpret the result. In the present research, online chatter detection based on the current signal applied to the ball screw drive (of the CNC machine) has been proposed and evaluated. There is no additional sensor required. Dynamic equations of the process are improved to simulate vibration behaviors of the milling tool during chatter conditions. The sequence of applied control signals for a particular feed rate is decided based on known physical and control parameters of the ball screw drive. The sequence of the applied control signal to the ball screw drive for a particular feed rate can be easily calculated. Hence, costly experimental data are eliminated. Long short-term memory neural networks are trained to detect the chatter based on the simulated sequence of control currents. The trained networks are then used to detect chatter, which shows 98% of accuracy in experiments.
Funder
University of Manitoba
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council
Subject
Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Computer Science Applications,Mechanical Engineering,Control and Systems Engineering
Cited by
38 articles.
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