SHAPED SAW WIRE WITH CONTROLLED CURVATURE AT BENDS
20210016374 ยท 2021-01-21
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B28D1/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23D61/185
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23D65/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B23D61/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23D65/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B28D1/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A saw wire to cut hard and brittle materials is disclosed that comprises a steel wire that is provided with bends with segments in between. The average degree of bending of the bends is between 0.5% and 5%. Such a saw wire has a higher breaking load compared to saw wires having a conventional, higher average degree of bending. A method to measure the curvature is described as well as a process to make the inventive saw wire. The invention is applicable to any shaped saw wire for example a single crimped saw wire, a saw wire with at least two crimps in different planes, a saw wire with crimps rotating in a plane.
Claims
1-17. (canceled)
18. A method to produce a saw wire comprising the steps of: providing a steel wire of diameter d with a breaking load F.sub.m in newton; leading said steel wire over one or more bending devices, said bending devices having teeth with a teeth radius R.sub.t, said steel wire being held under a tension T in newton measured after the one or more bending devices, thereby inducing bends in said steel wire at the teeth and segments in said steel wire between the teeth thereby forming a saw wire, wherein the teeth radius R.sub.t is larger than or equal to 4 times the diameter d, while said tension T is held between 3% and 30% of F.sub.m.
19. The method according to claim 18, wherein the teeth radius R.sub.t is larger than or equal to 4 times the diameter d and smaller than 12.5 times the diameter d and wherein the tension is held between 7.5% to 20% of F.sub.m.
20. The method according to claim 18, wherein the bending device is a single toothed wheel over which the said steel wire is lead over at least 3 teeth.
21. The method according to claim 18, wherein the bending device is one or more intermeshing toothed wheel pairs through which the wire is led thereby forming crimps in said steel wire, and wherein the indentation of one tooth between the top of two facing teeth is set between 1 to 10 times the diameter d of said steel wire.
22. The method according to claim 21, wherein the indentation of one tooth between the top of two facing teeth is set between 2 to 10 times the diameter d of said steel wire.
23. The method according to claim 21, wherein the indentation of one tooth between the top of two facing teeth is set between 2 to 5 times the diameter d of said steel wire.
24. The method according to claim 20, wherein two or more of said toothed wheel pairs induce crimps in different axial planes of said steel wire.
25. The method of claim 21, wherein said one or more bending devices are rotating relative to the axis of said steel wire.
26. The method according to claim 18, wherein the diameter d is between 50 micrometer and 300 micrometer.
27. The method according to claim 18, wherein the breaking load F.sub.m is between 30 to 250 newton.
28. The method according to claim 18, wherein said bends induced in said steel wire have a top curvature k.sub.i at each of the bends, and wherein the average of the product of said top curvatures with half said diameter, over a length of saw wire comprising at least N bends, with N being not less than 50, is between 0.5 and 5 percent or in formula:
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES IN THE DRAWINGS
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MODE(S) FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
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[0081] In
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[0083]
[0084] In
[0085] These discrete points can now be manipulated computationally. For example by mathematically rotating the wire around the Z-axis at an angle of 59 the centreline of the wire shows a single crimp in one plane with a wavelength of 3.62 mm and a peak-to-peak amplitude of 59 m. When virtually turning the wire further, a single second crimp occurs in a plane at an angle of 148 with a wavelength of 3.06 mm and an amplitude of 31 m. So the saw wire is of the type that comprises two different crimps in planes that are under an angle of 89 to one another and cross at the axis of the saw wire.
[0086] In the software package LabVIEW (from National Instruments) the traces were numerically differentiated according the Savitsky-Golay procedure. This procedure is a readymade Virtual Instrument (*.vi) available in the software package (Savitzky-Golay Filter Coefficients.vi). In this procedure the results of course depend on the degree n of the polynomial used and the number of data points 2m+1 in each vector.
[0087] After due experimentation the inventors found the settings n=5 and m=9 (i.e. there are 19 datapoints in the vector {13}) as most appropriate for the analysis of a saw wire. The length taken into account is then 1950 m or 0.95 mm which is about 8 diameters of the metal wire. Saw wires should be analysed over a length of between 4 to 10 times their diameter. Increasing the number of samples point in the analysis interval will average out all features of the space curve. Using less sample points increases the noise too much.
[0088] The degree of the polynomial used should at least be 4. This is because a space curve in the tripod tangent, normal and binormal can be locally expressed in a third order polynomial in the curve length s. Higher order terms remain for absorbing the error. Using a polynomial degree that is higher than 5 is not useful as only the first three derivatives are used in curvature and torsion formulas. The higher order terms allow a better fit, but are of no use as only the lower order terms appear in the derivation.
[0089] It is further noteworthy to mention that the curvature is completely independent of the orientation of the wire between the chucks: the clamping of the wire must not be exactly diametrical to one another in order to obtain reliable results. It is only when one deforms the wire by applying tension that the curvature results change due to the deformation of the wire.
[0090] By the Savitsky-Golay procedure numerical estimates were obtained for the first and second derivatives in X and Y as per formula {14} and subsequently used in the expression for the curvature {8}. In this way for every data point (except the first 9 and 9 last points) a curvature k can be calculated. For each point also the curve length s can be calculated by using {15}. By now plotting the quantity kd/2 as a function of s the graph of
[0091] In
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[0093] In a further module of LabVIEW, the top curvatures are detected and identified. Obviously only the peaks above the 0.5% threshold are identified. One can then easily extract the following statistics: [0094] 87 peaks are present in the range from 0 to 100 mm i.e. N=87 [0095] Hence the number of peaks per mm is 0.87 and the number of peaks per 100d is 10.092. [0096] The average of the 87 k.sub.id/2 top bending values is 0.95% and the standard deviation is 0.24% [0097] The maximum k.sub.id/2 value observed is 2.5% (at s equal to about 92 mm)
[0098] In a series of experiments a steel wire of diameter 115 m with a tensile strength of 3650 N/mm.sup.2 was deformed between a pair of toothed wheels thus forming a single crimp wire. The following parameters were varied: [0099] The tension T on the wire during crimping; [0100] The teeth radius R.sub.t by using different toothed wheels with 0.3 (2.6d), 0.5 (4.35d), 1 (8.70d), 1.5 (13d) mm teeth radius. [0101] The wavelength of the crimp: 1.8, 2.8, 3.1 and 3.7 mm.
[0102] The samples obtained where analysed geometrically as described above, as well as their mechanical properties determined and in particular the tensile strength. The results are depicted in
[0103] In
[0104] For saw wires with an average bending degree of between 3 and 5% a tensile strength loss of between 10 and 14% can be expected. For thicker saw wires in the range of 200 m to 300 m this is still acceptable. This is indicated by the solid line bracket in
[0105] For wires with an average bending degree of between 1.5% and 3% a loss in tensile strength of between 5.5% and 10% is acceptable for wires of diameter 120 m to 200 m (the dashed bracket in
[0106] Finally for wires with an average bending degree of between 0.5 and 1.5% the smallest loss in tensile strength of between 1.5 and 5.5% is expected and therefore most appropriate for wires smaller or equal to 120 m. This is indicated by the dotted bracket in
[0107] In a further series of experiments, the influence of the processing conditions was investigated. A straight steel wire with diameter d of 120 m was led through a first pair of deformation wheels of which the teeth have radii of 12.5 times d and at different tension levels. The tension level is measured after passage through the bending apparatus. The indentation of the wheel was set to 2d. Thereafter the average degree of bending was determined on the wires. In a second series of tests the same straight wire was deformed through a pair of wheels with teeth radii of 8.3d, with the same different tension levels and the same degree of indentation.
[0108] The results are depicted in
[0109] A tooth radius of 8.3d results in an average degree of bending within the preferred region of 0.50 to 1.50% for the smaller diameter of the steel wire. By preference the tension is held between 10 to 30% of the breaking load. However, the curvature shows a higher standard deviation.