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Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn

The mechanism of the material destruction under discharge pulses and material removal mechanism based on the thermochemical nature of the electrical erosion during electrical discharge machining of conductive materials were researched. The experiments were conducted for two structural materials used...

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Autores principales: Grigoriev, Sergey N., Volosova, Marina A., Okunkova, Anna A., Fedorov, Sergey V., Hamdy, Khaled, Podrabinnik, Pavel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8230098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34207860
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14123189
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author Grigoriev, Sergey N.
Volosova, Marina A.
Okunkova, Anna A.
Fedorov, Sergey V.
Hamdy, Khaled
Podrabinnik, Pavel A.
author_facet Grigoriev, Sergey N.
Volosova, Marina A.
Okunkova, Anna A.
Fedorov, Sergey V.
Hamdy, Khaled
Podrabinnik, Pavel A.
author_sort Grigoriev, Sergey N.
collection PubMed
description The mechanism of the material destruction under discharge pulses and material removal mechanism based on the thermochemical nature of the electrical erosion during electrical discharge machining of conductive materials were researched. The experiments were conducted for two structural materials used in the aerospace industry, namely austenite anticorrosion X10CrNiTi18-10 (12kH18N10T) steel and 2024 (D16) duralumin, machined by a brass tool of 0.25 mm in diameter in a deionized water medium. The optimized wire electrical discharge machining factors, measured discharge gaps (recommended offset is 170–175 µm and 195–199 µm, respectively), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy for both types of materials are reported. Elemental analysis showed the presence of metallic Zn, CuO, iron oxides, chromium oxides, and 58.07% carbides (precipitation and normal atmospheric contamination) for steel and the presence of metallic Zn, CuO, ZnO, aluminum oxide, and 40.37% carbides (contamination) for duralumin. For the first time, calculating the thermochemistry parameters for reactions of Zn(OH)(2), ZnO, and NiO formation was produced. The ability of Ni of chrome–nickel steel to interact with Zn of brass electrode was thermochemically proved. The standard enthalpy of the Ni(5)Zn(21) intermetallic compound formation (erosion dust) ΔH(0)(298) is −225.96 kJ/mol; the entropy of the crystalline phase S(c)(int) is 424.64 J/(mol·K).
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spelling pubmed-82300982021-06-26 Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn Grigoriev, Sergey N. Volosova, Marina A. Okunkova, Anna A. Fedorov, Sergey V. Hamdy, Khaled Podrabinnik, Pavel A. Materials (Basel) Article The mechanism of the material destruction under discharge pulses and material removal mechanism based on the thermochemical nature of the electrical erosion during electrical discharge machining of conductive materials were researched. The experiments were conducted for two structural materials used in the aerospace industry, namely austenite anticorrosion X10CrNiTi18-10 (12kH18N10T) steel and 2024 (D16) duralumin, machined by a brass tool of 0.25 mm in diameter in a deionized water medium. The optimized wire electrical discharge machining factors, measured discharge gaps (recommended offset is 170–175 µm and 195–199 µm, respectively), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy for both types of materials are reported. Elemental analysis showed the presence of metallic Zn, CuO, iron oxides, chromium oxides, and 58.07% carbides (precipitation and normal atmospheric contamination) for steel and the presence of metallic Zn, CuO, ZnO, aluminum oxide, and 40.37% carbides (contamination) for duralumin. For the first time, calculating the thermochemistry parameters for reactions of Zn(OH)(2), ZnO, and NiO formation was produced. The ability of Ni of chrome–nickel steel to interact with Zn of brass electrode was thermochemically proved. The standard enthalpy of the Ni(5)Zn(21) intermetallic compound formation (erosion dust) ΔH(0)(298) is −225.96 kJ/mol; the entropy of the crystalline phase S(c)(int) is 424.64 J/(mol·K). MDPI 2021-06-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8230098/ /pubmed/34207860 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14123189 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Grigoriev, Sergey N.
Volosova, Marina A.
Okunkova, Anna A.
Fedorov, Sergey V.
Hamdy, Khaled
Podrabinnik, Pavel A.
Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title_full Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title_fullStr Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title_full_unstemmed Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title_short Elemental and Thermochemical Analyses of Materials after Electrical Discharge Machining in Water: Focus on Ni and Zn
title_sort elemental and thermochemical analyses of materials after electrical discharge machining in water: focus on ni and zn
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8230098/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34207860
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14123189
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