Miniaturization and/or lightweighting typically demands higher dimensional accuracy and surface finish and increased use of difficult-to-machine materials such as high temperature alloys, titanium alloys, cobalt-based alloys, and nickel-based alloys such as Inconel 718. Waukesha, Wisconsin-based Walter has a solution for this range of applications – high power impulse magnetron sputtering (HIPIMS) physical vapor deposition (PVD) coating for cutting tools. In contrast to conventional PVD processes, HIPIMS subjects the target to short pulses of a few kilowatts of power, producing extremely smooth surfaces, lower friction and edge build-up, and excellent bonding of layers to the substrate and layer thicknesses distribution.
Hard, very tough materials that are becoming popular (such as Inconel 718DA with 42HRC in the aerospace industry or Ti-6Al-4V in the medical industry) have complex requirements for indexable inserts. Tough materials have a high tendency for adhesion, especially when they have a high nickel content, causing chips to stick to the cutting edge and form a build-up. Dimensional stability and surface quality suffer in that environment. Accelerated wear on cutting edges had to be accepted until now, especially in the case of high-strength materials.
During turning operations with high to medium depths of cut, chemical vapor deposition (CVD)-coated indexable inserts offer good-to-outstanding possibilities. However, they reach their limits in machining applications such as finishing and fine finishing, particularly where precision and tool life are concerned.
Innovation, potential
Gerd Kussmaul, senior turning product manager at Walter, describes the concept behind the new HIPIMS PVD-coated indexable inserts.
“Even if the fine finishing and finishing of ISO M, S, P, and N materials with the highest requirements for surface quality are still special or niche applications, we see great potential due to dynamic growth in the market right now,” Kussmaul says.
Fine finishing involves turning operations which are designed to achieve a consistently good surface quality.
“Walter has been looking for geometries and cutting tool materials that achieve this with process reliability,” Kussmaul explains. “The new PVD HIPIMS coatings demonstrate ideal properties for achieving extremely smooth surface and great layer adhesion on sharp cutting edges.”
Indexable inserts with extremely sharp geometries, such as the FN2 or the MN2, benefit from this coating process because extremely stable cutting edges are produced. Even under high loads, the layers do not chip off and the cutting edges do not break away. In addition, the high level of edge stability ensures lower levels of more-even wear. Even wearing ensures dimensional stability and surface quality throughout the tool’s life.
Extremely smooth, HIPIMS coatings can machine sticky aluminum alloys and other materials which would otherwise stick to the cutting edge during machining. Typical forms of wear such as built-up edges or significant flank face wear caused by chemical and physical reactions with adhering workpiece rarely occur.
Increased machining volumes
As Kussmaul notes, people don’t necessarily change from a tried-and-true cutting tool material without good reasons.
“Among other factors, the outstanding results achieved by the new HIPIMS grades regarding tool life and surface quality speak in their favor. This is clear from comparative tests,” Kussmaul says.
When performing finishing operations on tool steel H13 with 54 HRC, it was possible to increase the tool life by 275%. And the surface value of Ra 0.8µm was achieved throughout the entire tool life with process reliability.
Kussmaul describes another application: finishing Inconel 718DA at a cutting speed of 262fpm, with the new grade WSM01 and achieving a cutting time and tool life of 18 minutes – double the previous WXN10 grade.
Process reliability up, cost down
Walter's HIPIMS PVD indexable inserts can be applied anywhere that maximum precision, surface quality, and process reliability are required, particularly when dealing with difficult-to-machine materials. Inserts lower costs because the HIPIMS PVD coating, in conjunction with a carbide substrate, results in a cutting tool material with consistently high machining quality and long tool life. This is especially true for difficult machining such as fine finishing and for sticky materials such as aluminum alloys with high silicon content. Tool life and surface quality gains compared to previous indexable inserts are dramatic, often leading to significant cost reductions.
Walter USA LLC
https://www.walter-tools.com
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