2026/4/6
Saeed Farahany

Saeed Farahany

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID: 0000-0002-1532-0416
Education: PhD.
H-Index: 32
Faculty:
ScholarId: View
E-mail: farahany [at] bzte.ac.ir
ScopusId: View
Phone:
ResearchGate:

Research

Title
Microstructure characterization and maximization of the material removal rate in nano-powder mixed EDM of Al-Mg2Si metal matrix composite—ANFIS and RSM approaches
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Al-Mg2Si metal matrix composite (MMC) . Nano-powder mixed electrical discharge machining (Nano-powder mixed EDM) .Adaptiveneuro-fuzzyinferencesystem(ANFIS) .Responsesurfacemethodology(RSM) .Materialremovalrate(MRR) . Microstructure
Year
2019
Journal The International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology
DOI
Researchers Mehdi Hourmand ، Ahmed Sarhan ، Saeed Farahany ، Mohd Sayuti

Abstract

Al-Mg2Si in situ composite is a new metal matrix composite (MMC) with numerous applications in different engineering fields. MMCs are considered difficult-to-cut materials due to the abrasive nature of the reinforcement (e.g., Mg2Si), hardness, and built-up edge. Hence, electrical discharge machining (EDM) is one of the alternative ways to machine Al-Mg2Si. With EDM, it is possible to machine conductive materials with different strength, temperature resistance, and hardness as well as produce complicated shapes, high-aspect ratio slots, and deep cavities with precise dimensions and good surface finish. The experiments in this study were designed by response surface methodology (RSM) and ANFIS was utilized to analyze the nano-powder mixed EDM (NPMEDM) of Al-Mg2Si in situ composite. The study represents the impacts of NPMEDM parameters on changes in microstructure and material removal rate (MRR). The results revealed that among all interactions, the current-voltage and current-pulse ON time interactions have the most significant effect on MRR. Moreover, current has most significant effect, followed by voltage, pulse ON time and duty factor. An analysis of the Al-Mg2Si microstructure demonstrated that current, pulse ON time, and voltage have remarkable impact on the microstructure, size of craters, and profile of the machined surface. Moreover, decrease in spark energy leads to less microstructural change and better surface finish.