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Beyond Surfaces #9 - Opportunity

Errors not allowed: Marc Hervé runs with a niche. But it‘s very fast ...; Materials for Giants: Computational material development in mining; Spot on materials: Plasma; Turbo-charged innovation with suspension plasma spray; Spot on application; Hidden champions of mobility.

Beyond Surfaces #9 - Opportunity

The year 2020 has brought a great deal of change. In this edition of BEYOND SURFACES we include a “special”, giving you a unique insight into how our employees around the world have taken on the challenge of the initial months of the Covid-19 pandemic with commitment and creativity. We are also taking the magazine title quite literally and are looking “beyond surfaces” into the second pillar of the Oerlikon Group, our synthetic-fiber business.

With this edition, we are celebrating a small but important anniversary: The first issue of BEYOND SURFACES was published five years ago. Two years earlier, Metco had joined the Oerlikon Group, and this magazine was created to introduce our customers to the solutions offered by the two brands, Oerlikon Balzers and Oerlikon Metco.

Since then, the Oerlikon Group has undergone significant changes. Today, it is a “Powerhouse of Materials and Surface Solutions.” Our newest business unit, Additive Manufacturing, which focuses on the industrialization of additive manufacturing methods, represents an important augmentation of the Oerlikon Balzers and Oerlikon Metco portfolio.

Flip through the magazine

Machining with carbon power

The future is lead-free — at least as far as brass and copper materials are concerned. This is leading to completely different material properties and behavior during machining. The automotive industry, among others, is noticing the effects. In their search for new solutions, manufacturers are being supported by innovative companies such as Werkö, a German manufacturer of precision cutting tools, and Oerlikon Balzers.

It all began in 2013, when a new EU drinking water regulation limited the lead content in drinking water to 10 micrograms per liter. Manufacturers had to use lead-free brass in the production of sanitation products to comply with the ecological rule. As a result, one of those manufacturers, a Werkö customer, saw a dramatic increase in tool consumption when producing turned parts.

Completely altered machining

“The switch to lead-free brass resulted in four times higher tooling costs, long cycle times, tool breakage and a lot of scrap for our customer,” explains Vicente Madrid, product manager and team leader for direct sales at Werkö. The lead that had been eliminated had previously made machining and chip breaking much easier. In addition, some lead-free material substitutes increase tool wear through material smearing and produce long, winding chips, which impairs process reliability. “This changes the machining process completely,” says Vicente Madrid.

Challenges for the automotive industry

Challenges for the automotive industry

Manufacturers in the automotive industry also face the same problem, albeit for different reasons. In many countries, RoHS1 or similar directives restrict the use of lead in electronic equipment or components. And the ELV Directive2 2000/53/EC on end-of-life vehicles allows an exemption for copper alloys containing a maximum of 4% lead only until July 2021. This means that industries are increasingly faced with the challenge of machining lead-free or low-lead copper. At the same time, demand will grow rapidly due to e-mobility — from only 185,000 tonnes in 2017 to 1.74 million tonnes in 2027, according to one study. The reason: e-vehicles, including hybrids, require up to 3.5 times more copper than cars with combustion engines, and e-charging stations also need copper for contacts and connections.

1 RoHS = Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive (European Union)
2 ELV = End of Life Vehicles Directive (European Union)

Partnership provides a solution

After intensive testing in its own application center, Werkö developed a successful solution for its sanitation products customer. The solution is based on a special tool with a sophisticated geometry and spiraling. The coating was also tinkered with, because classic PVD coatings were unable to improve the results. But the use of BALINIT HARD CARBON from Oerlikon Balzers, a long-standing partner of Werkö, led to success on the second try. The combination of the special tool developed by Werkö with the BALINIT HARD CARBON coating solved the customer’s problem — and both tool costs and cycle times were once again within reasonable limits, as before.

This success is a confirmation for Rico Fritzsche, Segment Manager Cutting Tools at Oerlikon Balzers: “We have been gathering valuable knowledge about the machining of leadfree materials since 2014 in partnership with companies and within the research group.” And Edda Enders, commercial director of Werkö, is also satisfied, although she emphasizes: “There’s no one-size-fits-all solution for cases like this. Each need is different, and ultimately it’s small details that will determine performance.”

Werkö GmbH

  • Ilmenau, Germany
  • 74 employees

Werkö is a leading supplier of precision cutting tools for metalworking and last year moved to a new location with almost double the production floor space. The company is part of the global TDC Group, which has sites in China, USA, Mexico and Brazil.
www.werkoe.de

BALINIT HARD CARBON

This carbon coating is chemically inert and prevents built-up edge formation and sticking. Moreover, it restores chip flow and is also suitable for dry machining thanks to its high hardness (5,000 HV) and low friction coefficient. Three options are available, with different coating thicknesses depending on the application, as well as customer-specific pre- and post-treatment, which further optimize chip flow and cutting pressures.

www.oerlikon.com/balzers/balinit-hard-carbon

Contact

Petra Ammann

Petra Ammann

Head of Communications Oerlikon Balzers
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