Investigation on the dominant mechanism of chatter in high-load robot milling process based on theoretical and experimental analysis

Yuchao Du, Zhiqiang Liang*, Zirui Gao, Sichen Chen, Yi Yue, Jiabo Zhang, Hanliang Liu, Haoran Zheng, Baolong Liu, Tianyang Qiu, Zhibing Liu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chatter has always been a key problem restricting the improvement of robotic milling quality and efficiency. To avoid chatter, it is necessary to determine what is the dominant chatter mechanism (mode coupling or regenerative) of the robot milling system. Therefore, this paper focus on the dominant chatter mechanism in high-load (600kg) robot milling. The modal test results show that the dynamic flexibility of spindle-tool structure mode in high-load robot is significantly higher than that of the body structure mode, which is significantly different from the low-load robot in other studies. The mode coupling chatter stability prediction models are established based on eigenvalue method and zeroth order approximation, and the predicted stability boundaries are compared with the experimental results. The results show that only high-frequency chatter exists in the high speed region (1000–8000rpm), and no low frequency chatter occurs. The low-frequency chatter around the robot body mode is found in the low-speed region (400–1000rpm), but the mode coupling chatter theory could not explain the chatter varies periodically with the spindle speed. However, the stability boundary predicted by the regenerative chatter theory also changes periodically with the spindle speed. This indicates that the milling chatter dominant mechanism of high load robot is regenerative chatter. This study analyzes the milling chatter dominant mechanism of high-load robot through theoretical and experimental verification, which can provide theoretical support for high-load robot milling chatter control.

Original languageEnglish
Article number118886
JournalJournal of Sound and Vibration
Volume600
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Mar 2025

Keywords

  • Chatter dominant mechanism
  • High-load robotic milling
  • Milling chatter
  • Mode coupling chatter
  • Regenerative chatter

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