Cargando…

Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet

This study investigated the effect of abrasive water jet kinematic parameters, such as jet traverse speed and water pressure, on the surface of magnesium-based metal matrix nanocomposites (Mg-MMNCs) reinforced with 50 nm (average particle size) Al(2)O(3) particles at concentrations of 0.66 and 1.11...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mardi, Kumari Bimla, Dixit, Amit Rai, Pramanik, Alokesh, Hvizdos, Pavol, Mallick, Ashis, Nag, Akash, Hloch, Sergej
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8509201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34639869
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14195471
_version_ 1784582279676297216
author Mardi, Kumari Bimla
Dixit, Amit Rai
Pramanik, Alokesh
Hvizdos, Pavol
Mallick, Ashis
Nag, Akash
Hloch, Sergej
author_facet Mardi, Kumari Bimla
Dixit, Amit Rai
Pramanik, Alokesh
Hvizdos, Pavol
Mallick, Ashis
Nag, Akash
Hloch, Sergej
author_sort Mardi, Kumari Bimla
collection PubMed
description This study investigated the effect of abrasive water jet kinematic parameters, such as jet traverse speed and water pressure, on the surface of magnesium-based metal matrix nanocomposites (Mg-MMNCs) reinforced with 50 nm (average particle size) Al(2)O(3) particles at concentrations of 0.66 and 1.11 wt.%. The extent of grooving caused by abrasive particles and irregularities in the abrasive waterjet machined surface with respect to traverse speed (20, 40, 250 and 500 mm/min), abrasive flow rate (200 and 300 g/min) and water pressure (100 and 400 MPa) was investigated using surface topography measurements. The results helped to identify the mode of material disintegration during the process. The nanoindentation results show that material softening was decreased in nanocomposites with higher reinforcement content due to the presence of a sufficient amount of nanoparticles (1.11 wt.%), which protected the surface from damage. The values of selected surface roughness profile parameters—average roughness (Ra), maximum height of peak (Rp) and maximum depth of valleys (Rv)—reveal a comparatively smooth surface finish in composites reinforced with 1.11 wt.% at a traverse speed of 500 mm/min. Moreover, abrasive waterjet machining at high water pressure (400 MPa) produced better surface quality due to sufficient material removal and effective cleaning of debris from the machining zone as compared to a low water pressure (100 MPa), low traverse speed (5 mm/min) and low abrasive mass flow rate (200 g/min).
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8509201
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85092012021-10-13 Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet Mardi, Kumari Bimla Dixit, Amit Rai Pramanik, Alokesh Hvizdos, Pavol Mallick, Ashis Nag, Akash Hloch, Sergej Materials (Basel) Article This study investigated the effect of abrasive water jet kinematic parameters, such as jet traverse speed and water pressure, on the surface of magnesium-based metal matrix nanocomposites (Mg-MMNCs) reinforced with 50 nm (average particle size) Al(2)O(3) particles at concentrations of 0.66 and 1.11 wt.%. The extent of grooving caused by abrasive particles and irregularities in the abrasive waterjet machined surface with respect to traverse speed (20, 40, 250 and 500 mm/min), abrasive flow rate (200 and 300 g/min) and water pressure (100 and 400 MPa) was investigated using surface topography measurements. The results helped to identify the mode of material disintegration during the process. The nanoindentation results show that material softening was decreased in nanocomposites with higher reinforcement content due to the presence of a sufficient amount of nanoparticles (1.11 wt.%), which protected the surface from damage. The values of selected surface roughness profile parameters—average roughness (Ra), maximum height of peak (Rp) and maximum depth of valleys (Rv)—reveal a comparatively smooth surface finish in composites reinforced with 1.11 wt.% at a traverse speed of 500 mm/min. Moreover, abrasive waterjet machining at high water pressure (400 MPa) produced better surface quality due to sufficient material removal and effective cleaning of debris from the machining zone as compared to a low water pressure (100 MPa), low traverse speed (5 mm/min) and low abrasive mass flow rate (200 g/min). MDPI 2021-09-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8509201/ /pubmed/34639869 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14195471 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
Mardi, Kumari Bimla
Dixit, Amit Rai
Pramanik, Alokesh
Hvizdos, Pavol
Mallick, Ashis
Nag, Akash
Hloch, Sergej
Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title_full Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title_fullStr Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title_full_unstemmed Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title_short Surface Topography Analysis of Mg-Based Composites with Different Nanoparticle Contents Disintegrated Using Abrasive Water Jet
title_sort surface topography analysis of mg-based composites with different nanoparticle contents disintegrated using abrasive water jet
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8509201/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34639869
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14195471
work_keys_str_mv AT mardikumaribimla surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT dixitamitrai surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT pramanikalokesh surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT hvizdospavol surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT mallickashis surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT nagakash surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet
AT hlochsergej surfacetopographyanalysisofmgbasedcompositeswithdifferentnanoparticlecontentsdisintegratedusingabrasivewaterjet