Abrasive grain passivation and bond clogging critically limit the efficiency and process stability of diamond grinding of silicon carbide (SiC). To address these limitations, biological in-process dressing (BID) is integrated into the grinding of metal-bonded diamond wheels to regulate binder removal and abrasive grain protrusion. The dressing performance of biological fluids at different jet velocities was systematically compared with distilled water, focusing on grinding force, material removal depth, and process stability. The results demonstrate that BID significantly enhances overall grinding performance. At a jet velocity of 4 m/s, the grinding force was reduced by 38.15%, while the grinding depth completion rate reached 96.75%, corresponding to a 12.93% increase in actual removal depth relative to distilled water. During prolonged grinding, the deviation between the actual and target removal depths reached approximately 19% for the distilled water group, whereas it remained within 5% under BID conditions, indicating markedly improved process stability. Meanwhile, the microbial metabolite concentration (Fe 3+ ≈ 4.99 g/L) and pH (≈ 2.30) remained stable, indicating sustained microbial activity throughout the grinding process. Although the SiC surfaces after fine grinding exhibited relatively high surface roughness (74.5 - 89.1 nm), this reflects the intrinsic characteristics of the fine grinding stage rather than the final polished surface quality. Overall, BID provides an effective and environmentally benign strategy for enhancing the efficiency and sustainability of diamond grinding for hard and brittle materials.
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Weimin Lin
Huaqiao University
Jingyu Song
Huaqiao University
Weibin Shi
Journal of Materials Research and Technology
Huaqiao University
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Lin et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a75f56c6e9836116a2aa6c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmrt.2026.01.227