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Filtering Carbide Grinding Coolant

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Filtering Carbide Grinding Coolant

The grinding of carbide tools is actually an extrusion process.  Little chunks of the tungsten carbide and the cobalt binder are pulled from the carbide tool tip.  These chunks form sludge in the bottom of the coolant tank and the cobalt slowly dissolves or leaches into the coolant. 

If the machine coolant is recirculated these fine particles are pumped up to the spray head and sprayed onto the work area.  Some of the particles are thrown into the air where they can be inhaled.   Other particles are reground into even finer particles.   These recirculated chunks will cause rougher grinds and will increase the chance of burning during grinding.

Filtering out the chunks improves grinding coolant several ways.  Shops report that filtering doubles coolant life.  This varies according to which shops and how they measure performance, but double coolant life seems to be a minimum performance improvement.  Cleaner coolant gives better, smoother, faster grinds and helps prevent any possibility of burning. 

Filtering grinding coolant removes chunks of tungsten carbide, cobalt and grinding wheels.    A dirty sump can have as many as eighty million particles in a cubic centimeter.    The coolant pumped out of this sump to the spray head can still have as many twenty two thousand particles per cubic centimeter.  Filtering this coolant can remove as much as ninety nine percent of all particulate matter. 

Filtering grinding coolant prevent bacteria growth.  Bacteria grow in dirty sumps for two reasons.  The sludge is an excellent place for it to grow.  Tramp oils seal off the coolant and keep air out of it.  Filtering coolant removes sludge and tramp oils and prevents bacteria growth.  A filter system prevents bacteria growth by removing the sludge where bacteria grow.  Filtering also removes tramp oils, which create an anaerobic environment. 

Filtering can change the physical characteristics of the coolant.  What changes and how much it changes depends on the filter and the coolant.  Filtering removes tramp oils from coolants and it can also remove some lubricity from some coolants.  In most cases the user decides that the difference is minimal and is easily made up by additives.  

Particle counts  (parts per cubic centimeter)       

Size (Microns)

In Sump – Unfiltered

Filtered

Unused

 

 0

17,209

 0

1

140,317

25,575

11

2

14,382,515

21,432

1,049

3

15,364,737

9,720

1,935

4

19,644,411

4,223

3,367

5

13,751,087

2,550

3,618

6

9,120,620

1,673

1,181

 7

1,894,282

558

372

8

631,427

239

142

9

420,952

80

55

10

280,634

478

66

11

0

319

22

12

140,317

0

0

13

70,159

159

 22

14

70,159

0

0

15

140,317

80

11

16

70,159

0

29

17

65,774

32

5

18

85,506

112

0

19

26,309

80

0

20

0

48

0

Totals

76,299,682

84,583

11,885

Notes:

1.  In something as dirty as coolants the laser counter defaults to certain numbers that are accurate relative to one another, but that may not be exact counts to the individual particle.

2.  The large number of sub-micron particles in filtered coolant reflects the fact that this is a one-micron filter system.  The tightest specifications were typically 0.001” so one micron filtering was felt to be fine enough. 

Metal content for disposal

mg/L

New

Dirty

Filtered

Cobalt 

0.138

3,210

299

Arsenic

     

Barium

0.702

 

0.421

Cadmium

 

0.06

0.038

Chromium

   

0.024

Lead

   

0.09

Mercury

     

Selenium

     

Silver