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On-the-fly laser machining: a case study for in situ balancing of rotative parts

Stoesslein, M.; Axinte, Dragos A.; Gilbert, D.

On-the-fly laser machining: a case study for in situ balancing of rotative parts Thumbnail


Authors

M. Stoesslein

Dragos A. Axinte

D. Gilbert



Abstract

On-the-fly laser machining is defined as a process that aims to generate pockets/patches on target components that are rotated or moved at a constant velocity. Since it is a nonintegrated process (i.e., linear/rotary stage system moving the part is independent of that of the laser), it can be deployed to/into large industrial installations to perform in situ machining, i.e., without the need of disassembly. This allows a high degree of flexibility in its applications (e.g., balancing) and can result in significant cost savings for the user (e.g., no dis(assembly) cost). This paper introduces the concept of on-the-fly laser machining encompassing models for generating user-defined ablated features as well as error budgeting to understand the sources of errors on this highly dynamic process. Additionally, the paper presents laser pulse placement strategies aimed at increasing the surface finish of the targeted component by reducing the area surface roughness that are possible for on-the-fly laser machining. The overall concept was validated by balancing a rotor system through ablation of different pocket shapes by the use of a Yb:YAG pulsed fiber laser. In this respect, first, two different laser pulse placement strategies (square and hexagonal) were introduced in this research and have been validated on Inconel 718 target material; thus, it was concluded that hexagonal pulse placement reduces surface roughness by up to 17% compared to the traditional square laser pulse placement. The concept of on-the-fly laser machining has been validated by ablating two different features (4 × 60 mm and 12 × 4 mm) on a rotative target part at constant speed (100 rpm and 86 rpm) with the scope of being balanced. The mass removal of the ablated features to enable online balancing has been achieved within 

Citation

Stoesslein, M., Axinte, D. A., & Gilbert, D. (in press). On-the-fly laser machining: a case study for in situ balancing of rotative parts. Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering, 139(3), https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4034476

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 3, 2016
Online Publication Date Oct 3, 2016
Deposit Date Feb 7, 2017
Publicly Available Date Feb 7, 2017
Journal Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering
Print ISSN 1087-1357
Electronic ISSN 1528-8935
Publisher American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 139
Issue 3
DOI https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4034476
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/824992
Publisher URL http://manufacturingscience.asmedigitalcollection.asme.org/article.aspx?articleid=2546125
Additional Information © ASME

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