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Creators/Authors contains: "Mathews, Jobin T"

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  1. Tool-chip contact stresses are of major interest in developing a basic understanding of the mechanics of machining. The interfacial and sliding conditions along the tool-chip contact in machining differ significantly from that of conventional, lightly loaded, tribological contacts in two major aspects — the occurrence of plastic flow (in the chip) at the sliding interface and intimate nature of the contact where apparent and real contact areas are the same. In this study, we present an experimental method for direct measurement of the tool-chip contact stresses. This involves the use of sapphire as a cutting tool coupled with digital photoelasticity to obtain full-field principal stress difference (isochromatics) and principal stress directions (isoclinics). This enables direct full-field characterization of the tool-chip contact stresses, as well as stresses within the cutting tool, at a micron-scale resolution not achieved previously. Our results show that the shear stress exhibits a maximum at a small distance from the tool tip, while the normal stress decreases monotonically with increasing distance from the tool tip. The maximum shear stress shows a good correlation with the shear flow stress of the material that is being machined. We also briefly discuss applications of the method to derive the stress distribution at the tool flank face and quantify frictional dissipation at both the contacts — tool-chip contact and flank-machined surface contact. 
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