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Contact Heat Transfer of a Cutting Diamond Disk With a Boundary Layer of Air and a Decrease in the Temperature of Heating of the Disk

EasyChair Preprint no. 1801

10 pagesDate: October 31, 2019

Abstract

Cutting of natural and artificial building materials is most often carried out with diamond cutting disks on a metal base at cutting speeds of about 50-80 m / s. The intensity of the cutting process causes a significant heat release, as a result of which the disk temperature rises to unacceptable values. The value of these unacceptable temperatures is about 600 - 6500С.

At these temperatures, graphitization of diamond grains occurs, i.e. loss of diamond layer and loss of cutting properties. In addition, a thin diamond disk (thickness 1 - 3 mm) is deformed, which leads to jamming and its tensile strength at these temperatures is reduced by half, which creates the risk of rupture by centrifugal forces.

In this work, it is taken into account that during the rotation of the disk, a boundary layer of air is created around it, which is stationary relative to the disk. Consequently, contact heat transfer occurs between the disk and the boundary layer, and then convective heat transfer occurs between the boundary layer and the surrounding air. This scheme allows you to more accurately determine the time of safe operation of the diamond disk.

Contact heat transfer between the wheel and the boundary layer is not effective enough to lower the temperature.

When air with a negative temperature is introduced into the boundary layer by means of a Rank-Hillsch tube, the disk temperature decreases by about 10%.

When a sprayed coolant (fog cooling) is introduced into the boundary layer by means of an ejector tube, the disk temperature decreases by 25%, which ensures an increase in the time of continuous operation.

Keyphrases: air pressure, boundary layer, boundary layer thickness, Cooling media, cutting zone, diamond disc, mathematical modeling, operating time

BibTeX entry
BibTeX does not have the right entry for preprints. This is a hack for producing the correct reference:
@Booklet{EasyChair:1801,
  author = {Vladimir Lebedev and Alla Bespalova and Yuri Morozov and Tatyana Chumachenko and Nataliya Klymenko},
  title = {Contact Heat Transfer of a Cutting Diamond Disk With a Boundary Layer of Air and a Decrease in the Temperature of Heating of the Disk},
  howpublished = {EasyChair Preprint no. 1801},

  year = {EasyChair, 2019}}
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