TY - JOUR
T1 - Plasma Polishing and Finishing of CVD-Diamond Coated WC (Co) Dies for Dry Stamping
AU - Yunata, Ersyzario Edo
AU - Aizawa, Tatsuhiko
AU - Tamaoki, Kenji
AU - Kasugi, Masao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - The CVD-diamond coated WC (Co) dies have been high-lighted as a tool to make dry stamping of stainless sheets, aluminium alloys and cold-rolled steel sheets. The bare CVD-diamond film had higher roughness with steep asperities than 1.5 Rz so that the friction coefficient became 0.3 to 0.5. These asperities of rough diamond crystals ploughed and worn the counter material surface. Manual and mechanical polishing processes by using the diamond powders and oxidizers required for long, tedious time; in addition, the curved surfaces of diamond coated die shoulders are difficult to be homogeneously polished and finished. On the other hand, the nano-optical polishing was only effective to remove the nano-sized residuals on the polished surfaces. In the present paper, the plasma oxidation polishing and finishing process was proposed as a non-traditional method to reduce the original maximum surface roughness down to 0.1 μm in Rz or less than. The plasma-density intensifying device was designed and used to control the plasma sheath on the diamond films toward the homogeneous polishing in large surface area. Two types of test-pieces were prepared for polishing experiments; e.g., the diamond-coated flat and curved WC (Co). The former specimen was employed to prove the low friction and wearing state should be preserved in the tribo-testing. The latter one was used to demonstrate that the diamond film on the deep-drawing dies should be homogeneously polished and finished.
AB - The CVD-diamond coated WC (Co) dies have been high-lighted as a tool to make dry stamping of stainless sheets, aluminium alloys and cold-rolled steel sheets. The bare CVD-diamond film had higher roughness with steep asperities than 1.5 Rz so that the friction coefficient became 0.3 to 0.5. These asperities of rough diamond crystals ploughed and worn the counter material surface. Manual and mechanical polishing processes by using the diamond powders and oxidizers required for long, tedious time; in addition, the curved surfaces of diamond coated die shoulders are difficult to be homogeneously polished and finished. On the other hand, the nano-optical polishing was only effective to remove the nano-sized residuals on the polished surfaces. In the present paper, the plasma oxidation polishing and finishing process was proposed as a non-traditional method to reduce the original maximum surface roughness down to 0.1 μm in Rz or less than. The plasma-density intensifying device was designed and used to control the plasma sheath on the diamond films toward the homogeneous polishing in large surface area. Two types of test-pieces were prepared for polishing experiments; e.g., the diamond-coated flat and curved WC (Co). The former specimen was employed to prove the low friction and wearing state should be preserved in the tribo-testing. The latter one was used to demonstrate that the diamond film on the deep-drawing dies should be homogeneously polished and finished.
KW - CVD diamond coating
KW - Plasma polishing
KW - polishing procees
KW - surface roughness
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U2 - 10.1016/j.proeng.2017.10.981
DO - 10.1016/j.proeng.2017.10.981
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85036659483
SN - 1877-7058
VL - 207
SP - 2197
EP - 2202
JO - Procedia Engineering
JF - Procedia Engineering
T2 - International Conference on the Technology of Plasticity, ICTP 2017
Y2 - 17 September 2017 through 22 September 2017
ER -