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MERCHANT CIRCLE DIAGRAM 140050119028 Kanani Manthan Faculty, Vipul Patel

Merchant Circle Diagram

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Page 1: Merchant Circle Diagram

MERCHANT CIRCLE

DIAGRAM

140050119028 Kanani Manthan

Faculty,Vipul Patel

Page 2: Merchant Circle Diagram

OUTLINE

Brief introduction to Merchant’s Circle.Assumptions for Merchant’s Circle Diagram. Construction of Merchant’s Circle.

Solutions of Merchant’s Circle.

Advantages of Merchant’s Circle. Need for the analysis of cutting forces. Limitations of Merchant’s Circle.

Conclusion

Page 3: Merchant Circle Diagram

MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

Page 4: Merchant Circle Diagram

INTRODUCTION Merchant’s Circle Diagram is

constructed to ease the analysis of cutting forces acting during orthogonal (Two Dimensional) cutting of work piece.

Ernst and Merchant do this scientific analysis for the first time in 1941 and gives the following relation in 1944

It is convenient to determine various force and angles.

Page 5: Merchant Circle Diagram

METAL CUTTING

ORTHOGONAL CUTTING OBLIQUE CUTTING

Cutting Edge is normal to tool feed.

Here only two force components are considered i.e. cutting force and thrust force. Hence known as two dimensional cutting.

Shear force acts on smaller area.

Cutting Edge is inclined at an acute angle to tool feed.

Here only three force components are considered i.e. cutting force, radial force and thrust force. Hence known as three dimensional cutting.

Shear force acts on larger area.

Metal Cutting is the process of removing unwanted material from the workpiece in the form of chips

Page 6: Merchant Circle Diagram

TERMINOLOGY

α : Rack angle λ : Frictional angle ϕ : Shear angle Ft : Thrust Force

Fn: Normal Shear Force

Fc: Cutting Force

Fs: Shear Force F: Frictional Force N: Normal Frictional Force V: Feed velocity

RAKE ANGLE Back Rake Angle: It is the angle

between the face of the tool and measured in a plane perpendicular to the side cutting edge

Side Rake Angle: It is the angle between the face of the tool and measured in a plane perpendicular to the base

P

F

RN

λ

Fs

Ft

FcFn

F

N

Page 7: Merchant Circle Diagram

ASSUMPTIONS FOR MERCHANT’S CIRCLE DIAGRAM

Tool edge is sharp. The work material undergoes deformation across a

thin shear plane. There is uniform distribution of normal and shear

stress on shear plane.The work material is rigid and perfectly plastic. The shear angle ϕ adjusts itself to minimum work. The friction angle λ remains constant and is

independent of ϕ. The chip width remains constant. The chip does not flow to side, or there is no side

spread.

Page 8: Merchant Circle Diagram

Fn

Ft

CONSTRUCTION OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

Fs

Fc

FR

α

α

φ

λ

φλ-α

N

V

Page 9: Merchant Circle Diagram

FORCES INCLUDED IN METAL CUTTING

Fs , Resistance to shear of the metal in forming the chip. It acts along the shear plane.

Fn , ‘Backing up’ force on the chip provided by the workpiece. Acts normal to the shear plane.

N, It at the tool chip interface normal to the cutting face of the tool and is provided by the tool.

F, It is the frictional resistance of the tool acting on the chip. It acts downward against the motion of the chip as it glides upwards along the tool face.

Page 10: Merchant Circle Diagram

SOLUTION OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLEKnowing Fc , Ft , α and ϕ, all other component forces can be calculated as:

The coefficient of friction will be then given as :

On Shear plane,α

α

φλ-α

λφ

Fs

Ft

Fc

Fn

F

N

R

V

Now,

Page 11: Merchant Circle Diagram

Now shear plane angle

The average stresses on the shear plane area are:

SOLUTION OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

α

α

φλ-α

λ

φ

Fs

Ft

Fc

Fn

F

N

R

V

Let ϕ be the shear angle

Where,

Page 12: Merchant Circle Diagram

SOLUTION OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

Assuming that λ is independent of ϕ , for max. shear stress

α

α

φλ-α

λφ

Fs

Ft

Fc

Fn

F

N

R

V

Now the shear force can be written as:

and

Page 13: Merchant Circle Diagram

NEED OF ANALYSIS OF FORCESAnalysis of cutting forces is helpful as:-

Design of stiffness etc. for the machine tolerance.Whether work piece can withstand the cutting force

can be predicted. In study of behavior and machinability

characterization of the work piece. Estimation of cutting power consumption, which

also enables selection of the power source(s) during design of the machine tool.

Condition monitoring of the cutting tools and machine tool.

Page 14: Merchant Circle Diagram

ADVANTAGES OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

Proper use of MCD enables the followings :-

Easy, quick and reasonably accurate determination of several other forces from a few forces involved in machining.

Friction at chip-tool interface and dynamic yield shear strength can be easily determined.

Equations relating the different forces are easily developed.

Page 15: Merchant Circle Diagram

LIMITATIONS OF MERCHANT’S CIRCLE

Some limitations of use of MCD are :-

Merchant’s Circle Diagram (MCD) is valid only for orthogonal cutting.

By the ratio, F/N, the MCD gives apparent (not actual) coefficient of friction.

It is based on single shear plane theory.

Page 16: Merchant Circle Diagram

CONCLUSIONS/RESULTS

Following conclusions/results are drawn from MCD :-

Shear angle is given by

For practical purpose, the following values of ϕ has been suggested:

ϕ = α for α>15o

ϕ = 15o for α<15o

Page 17: Merchant Circle Diagram

THANK YOU