This study material is compiled from an IE 462 lecture handout and an accompanying audio transcript, providing a comprehensive overview of surface integrity in advanced manufacturing processes.
IE 462 – Surface Integrity: Comprehensive Study Guide
1. Introduction to Surface Integrity 📚
Surface integrity refers to the complete condition of a manufactured surface and the subsurface layer directly beneath it. It encompasses both the visible geometric features and the deeper metallurgical and mechanical changes induced by manufacturing processes.
✅ Key Aspects:
- Geometric Features: Roughness, waviness, and lay (the predominant direction of the surface pattern).
- Metallurgical & Mechanical Changes: Residual stresses, alterations in hardness, phase transformations, and microstructural damage.
💡 Importance: Understanding surface integrity is crucial because it directly dictates the functional performance of manufactured components, particularly their fatigue life, corrosion resistance, and wear behavior. Every manufacturing process leaves a unique "signature" on the surface, and engineers must select and control processes to ensure this signature enhances, or at least does not degrade, the part's service performance.
2. Impact on Component Performance 📈
Surface integrity profoundly affects a component's performance, especially its resistance to fatigue.
2.1 Fatigue Strength and Finishing Methods
Different finishing methods can dramatically alter a component's fatigue strength.
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Cantilever Bending Tests Example:
- Gentle Grinding: Achieved an endurance limit of approximately 60 ksi (considered the baseline or best performance).
- Gentle Electrical Discharge Machining (EDM): Reduced the endurance limit to 35–40 ksi.
- Abusive EDM: Further reduced it to about 22 ksi, representing a nearly two-thirds reduction compared to gentle grinding.
- Reason for EDM Degradation: EDM creates a recast layer with microcracks, tensile residual stresses, and heat-affected zones, all of which act as critical sites for fatigue crack initiation.
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Rotating Beam Fatigue Tests (2024-T4 Aluminum) Example:
- Best Performance: Milled and Roller Burnished (MRB)
- Improved Performance: Turned and Roller Burnished (TRB), Turned and Shot Peened (TSP)
- Moderate Performance: Turned and Polished (TPD)
- Worst Performance: Turned (TRD), Milled (MLD)
💡 Insight: Roller burnishing and shot peening significantly improve fatigue life by introducing beneficial compressive residual stresses into the surface layer. These compressive stresses counteract the tensile stresses that drive fatigue crack initiation and propagation. Polishing, while improving surface finish (lower Ra), does not introduce these compressive stresses, resulting in a more modest benefit.
2.2 Surface Deformation During Machining
When a cutting tool removes material, it causes severe plastic deformation beneath the newly created surface.
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Observations in Cross-Sectional Images:
- Highly distorted grain boundaries near the surface, bent in the direction of cutting.
- A gradient of deformation that decreases with depth from the surface.
- Potential microcracking within the most severely deformed zone.
- A "depth of damage" that extends beyond the visible surface roughness.
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Factors Influencing Damage: Cutting parameters (speed, feed, depth of cut), tool geometry (especially rake angle), tool wear, and workpiece material properties.
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Rake Angle and Subsurface Damage: There is an inverse relationship between rake angle and the depth of subsurface damage.
- A lower (more negative) rake angle means the tool pushes more material, increasing the compressive stress field, plastic deformation, and heat generation, leading to greater damage depth (e.g., from 0.015 inches at 40° to over 0.050 inches at 5°).
- Trade-off: Sharp tools with high positive rake angles produce less subsurface damage but are weaker and more prone to chipping.
3. Surface Texture: Definitions and Components 📊
Surface texture is the collection of repetitive and/or random deviations from the ideal (nominal) surface of a manufactured part.
3.1 Hierarchical Decomposition of Surface Texture
Surface texture is categorized by wavelength scale:
- Form: Long wavelengths (> 1000:1 wavelength/amplitude ratio). Caused by machine deflection, thermal distortion, clamping.
- Waviness: Intermediate wavelengths (100:1 to 1000:1 ratio). Caused by vibration, chatter, spindle runout.
- Roughness: Short wavelengths (< 100:1 ratio). Influenced by tool geometry, feed marks, built-up edge.
- Flaws: Random, localized defects like cracks, scratches, inclusions, or craters.
💡 Note: The distinction between waviness and roughness is not absolute and depends on measurement sampling length and filtering techniques, with ISO standards defining specific cutoff wavelengths.
3.2 Origins of Surface Irregularities
Surface irregularities stem from three primary sources:
- The Production Process: Each process (turning, grinding, polishing, coatings) leaves a characteristic pattern (lay) and roughness range.
- The Material Structure: Inherent properties like brittleness, grain boundaries, and inclusions.
- Service Conditions: Changes during use, such as wear, running-in, or corrosion.
3.3 Key Profile Features
A machined surface profile is characterized by:
- Lay: The predominant direction of the surface pattern (e.g., parallel feed marks in turning).
- Waviness height and spacing: Amplitude and wavelength of longer undulations.
- Roughness height: Maximum peak-to-valley depth within the evaluation length.
- Roughness spacing: Horizontal distance between roughness peaks.
- Flaws: Localized defects superimposed on the regular texture.
4. Surface Measurement Methods 🔬
Surface texture can be measured using contact or non-contact techniques.
4.1 Contact Measurement – Stylus Profilometry
- Mechanism: A diamond-tipped stylus (typically 2–10 µm radius) traverses the surface. Its vertical displacement is converted to an electrical signal via an LVDT (Linear Variable Differential Transformer).
- Output: Roughness parameters (Ra, Rq) or a full profile strip chart.
- Roughness-Width Cutoff: A filter setting that determines which wavelengths are included in the roughness calculation; longer wavelengths are classified as waviness.
4.2 Non-Contact Measurement – Laser Surface Topography
- Mechanism: Modern laser-based optical systems scan the surface without physical contact, producing full 3D topographic maps.
- Advantages over Stylus:
- No risk of scratching or deforming the measured surface.
- Ability to capture microscopic shapes difficult for a stylus.
- Provides full areal (3D) data, not just a single line profile.
- Better for characterizing random and textured surfaces where a single profile is insufficient.
4.3 When to Use Which Measurement Approach
- Single (Line) Profile: Adequate for CNC surfaces (turning, grinding, milling).
- Area Measurement: Recommended for textured surfaces (honing, laser); required for random surfaces (defects, additive manufacturing, abrasive processes).
5. Roughness Parameters – 2D (R-Parameters) 🔢
These parameters quantify surface roughness from a 2D profile.
5.1 Arithmetic Average Roughness, Ra
- Definition: The arithmetic mean of the absolute deviations of the profile from the mean line over the evaluation length.
- Limitation: Ra alone does not fully characterize a surface; different topographies can yield the same Ra value.
5.2 Root Mean Square Roughness, Rq
- Definition: The root mean square average of the profile deviations.
- Sensitivity: Rq is more sensitive to peaks and valleys than Ra because squaring amplifies larger deviations. For a Gaussian surface, Rq ≈ 1.25 × Ra.
5.3 Skewness, Rsk
- Definition: Describes the symmetry of the height distribution about the mean line (third statistical moment).
- Rsk = 0: Symmetric (Gaussian) distribution.
- Rsk < 0: Skewed to the upper side; surface dominated by valleys (good for bearing surfaces, oil retention, often seen after sliding abrasion).
- Rsk > 0: Skewed to the lower side; surface dominated by peaks (spiky surface, poor bearing area).
5.4 Kurtosis, Rku
- Definition: Describes the "peakedness" or sharpness of the height distribution (fourth moment).
- Rku = 3: Normal (Gaussian) distribution.
- Rku > 3: Sharp, spiky surface with a narrow height distribution (leptokurtic); few extreme peaks/valleys, but they are tall.
- Rku < 3: Broad, even surface with a wide height distribution (platykurtic); rounded peaks and valleys.
5.5 Bearing Ratio Curve (Abbott-Firestone Curve)
- Purpose: Shows the percentage of material at a given height, providing functionally meaningful parameters.
- Key Parameters:
- Rpk (Reduced Peak Height): Height of peaks above the core; these will be worn away first during running-in.
- Rk (Core Roughness Depth): Height of the core profile; the working part of the surface after run-in.
- Rvk (Reduced Valley Depth): Depth of valleys below the core; indicates oil retention capacity.
- Mr1 (Peak Material Portion): Material ratio at the boundary between peaks and core.
- Mr2 (Valley Material Portion): Material ratio at the boundary between core and valleys.
- Construction: Derived by fitting a secant line of 40% length with the smallest gradient to the curve, then extrapolating to find Mr1, Mr2, and the Rpk/Rk/Rvk zones.
6. Areal (3D) Surface Parameters – S-Parameters 🌐
Real surfaces are three-dimensional, requiring areal (3D) parameters for comprehensive characterization, typically obtained from optical measurement techniques. These parameters use the prefix "S" instead of "R" but share similar mathematical definitions, integrated over an area (A) instead of a line (L).
6.1 Height Parameters
- Sa (Arithmetical Mean Height): The areal extension of Ra; average absolute deviation from the mean plane.
- Sq (Root Mean Square Height): The areal extension of Rq; more sensitive to extreme values than Sa.
- Sp (Maximum Peak Height): Height of the tallest peak above the mean plane.
- Sv (Maximum Valley Depth): Depth of the deepest valley below the mean plane.
- Sz (Maximum Height): Total range from the deepest valley to the highest peak (Sp + Sv).
⚠️ Limitation: Height parameters describe only the distribution of height information and do not capture horizontal features like spacing, periodicity, or spatial arrangement of the texture.
6.2 Distribution Parameters (3D)
- Ssk (Skewness): Similar interpretation to Rsk. Ssk = 0 for a uniform (symmetric) height distribution. Negative Ssk indicates peaks have been removed (e.g., by wear), while positive Ssk indicates a surface with deep valleys.
- Sku (Kurtosis): Similar interpretation to Rku. Sku = 3 for a Gaussian distribution. Sku < 3 indicates an even, broad height distribution; Sku > 3 indicates sharp, concentrated features.
6.3 Skewness and Kurtosis for Engineering Surfaces
Different machining processes exhibit characteristic Ssk and Sku values:
- Turning: Low kurtosis (~3–4), skewness near 0 to slightly positive.
- Milling: Moderate kurtosis, skewness around 0.
- Grinding: Higher kurtosis (~6–8), slightly negative skewness.
- Honing: Highest kurtosis (~8–10+), strongly negative skewness (plateau-like surface).
- EDM: Moderate kurtosis (~5–6), skewness near 0 to slightly positive.
7. Surface Roughness by Manufacturing Process ⚙️
Each manufacturing process produces a characteristic range of surface roughness (typical Ra values):
- Roughing: Flame cutting, snagging, sawing (12.5 – 50 µm)
- General Machining: Drilling, milling, turning (0.8 – 12.5 µm)
- Finishing: Boring, broaching, reaming (0.4 – 3.2 µm)
- Fine Finishing: Grinding, honing, roller burnishing (0.05 – 1.6 µm)
- Superfinishing: Lapping, polishing, superfinishing (0.012 – 0.4 µm)
- Non-Traditional: EDM, ECM, laser, electron beam (0.4 – 12.5 µm, varies widely)
8. ISO Standards and Cutoff Selection 📜
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) standards define how surface texture is measured and interpreted.
8.1 ISO 4287 and ISO 3274 – Profile Parameters (2D)
These standards define 2D roughness parameters and specify measurement conditions, including cutoff wavelengths (λc) that are determined by the surface being measured. The cutoff wavelength separates roughness from waviness.
8.2 ISO 25178 – Areal Surface Texture (3D)
Unlike 2D standards where cutoffs are often predefined, ISO 25178 allows the user to define the cutoff for areal measurements. The processing pipeline for areal data involves several stages: 1️⃣ Raw Surface: The unprocessed scan data. 2️⃣ Primitive Surface: After low-pass filtering (noise and spike removal). 3️⃣ S-F Surface: After shape and form removal. 4️⃣ S-L Surface: After high-pass filtering for roughness extraction. 5️⃣ S-Parameters: Extraction and computation of areal parameters from the defined area.
9. Surface Enhancement: Shot Peening ✨
Shot peening is a crucial cold-working process used to enhance surface integrity and fatigue life.
9.1 Mechanism
- Small spherical media (steel, ceramic, or glass shot) are propelled at high velocity onto the workpiece surface.
- Each impact creates a small indentation, plastically deforming the surface layer.
- Because the bulk material below constrains the deformed layer from expanding laterally, a beneficial compressive residual stress is induced in the surface.
- This compressive stress field can extend 0.5–2 mm below the surface, depending on shot size, velocity, and coverage. Below this zone, the material is in a state of balancing tensile residual stress.
9.2 Effects on Surface Properties
- Compressive Residual Stresses: The stress profile shows compression at the surface, transitioning to tension at depth. The maximum compressive stress typically occurs just below the surface.
- Increased Surface Hardness: Work hardening increases the Knoop hardness at the surface. Smaller shot generally produces higher surface hardness due to more concentrated energy.
💡 Why this matters for fatigue: Fatigue cracks almost always initiate at the surface where tensile stresses are highest. By placing the surface in compression, shot peening forces any fatigue crack to first overcome this compressive stress before it can propagate. This can increase fatigue life by factors of 2–10 or more.








