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Surface engineering of ultra-hard polycrystalline structures using a nanosecond Yb fibre laser: Effect of process parameters on microstructure, hardness and surface finish

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 11:35 authored by Manuela Pacella, Vahid Nekouie, Amir BadieeAmir Badiee

The use of lasers for near-net shape manufacturing of cutting tools, made of ultra-hard materials such as polycrystalline diamonds, is recently becoming a standard processing step for cutting tool manufacturers. Due to the different machinability exhibited by microstructurally different composites, the laser processing parameters and their effects need to be investigated systematically when changing the material. In this context, the present paper investigates the effects of a fibre laser milling process (nanosecond pulse duration) on surface topography, roughness, microstructure and microhardness of two microstructurally different polycrystalline diamond composites. Pockets were first milled using a pulsed ytterbium-doped fibre laser (1064?nm wavelength) at different fluences, feed speeds and pulse durations, and finally characterised using a combination of Scanning Electron Microscopy, White Light Interferometry, Energy Dispersive using X-Ray (EDX) and micro hardness analyses. For laser feed speed in the region of 1000?mm/s, micro-indentation tests revealed an improvement of hardness from 75?GPa to 240?GPa at a depth of 350?nm, and to 258?GPa at a depth of 650?nm below which the microstructure is preserved as confirmed by microscopy images of the analysed cross sections. For fluences in the region of 11.34?Jcm?2 a variation of cobalt binder volume between the two composites causes a change in milling mechanism. At fluences below 20?Jcm?2, the proposed milling process for CTM302 resulted in a microstructural change (ultra-hard grain size and Cobalt binder weight), better surface integrity (140?nm) and improvement of micro hardness (up to 258?GPa). The properties achieved through the proposed process achieve better hardness and roughness when compared to laser shock processing. To the best of authors’ knowledge, it is reported for the first time that an increase of hardness accompanied by improved surface roughness can be achieved on polycrystalline diamond through low-energy laser processing.

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School affiliated with

  • School of Engineering (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Materials Processing Technology

Volume

266

Pages/Article Number

311-328

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

0924-1036

Date Submitted

2019-11-15

Date Accepted

2018-11-01

Date of First Publication

2018-11-14

Date of Final Publication

2019-04-30

Date Document First Uploaded

2019-10-30

ePrints ID

38256

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