Antonio Miotello, Roger Kelly
Surface Science
Grinding temperatures are measured using an infrared sensor in ferrite and steel. For reference purposes, temperatures are also measured in a reduced model for grinding which consists of a single diamond grain sliding across the workpiece surface at high speed. The results include temperature as a function of sliding velocity, rate of temperature decay as the grain moves away from contact, and histograms of the frequency that grains on the grinding wheel attain a given temperature. It is found that temperature measurements can be used to detect out-of-roundness in the wheel. Finally, a simplified two-dimensional model based on a heat flux moving with constant velocity gives reasonably good agreement with experiment. © 1990 by ASME.
Antonio Miotello, Roger Kelly
Surface Science
F.M. D'Heurle
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B
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Synthetic Metals
Ijeoma Nnebe, Claudius Feger, et al.
MRS Fall Meeting 2006