This application is a 371 of PCT/EP03/03081 filed on Mar. 25, 2003.
The invention concerns a continuous casting mold for liquid metals, especially liquid steel, with steel charging plates, which are arranged parallel opposite each other to form the casting cross section and are surrounded by water tanks; with cassette-type copper plates, which rest against the steel charging plates and bound the casting cavity; possibly with end plates, which are inserted at the end faces of the casting cavity for establishing the thickness and/or width of the cast strand and close the casting cavity at the end faces; and with coolant channels that connect an inlet with an outlet in the copper plates at their contact surfaces with the steel charging plates.
The specified continuous casting mold is known from DE 195 81 604 T1. A continuous casting mold of this type represents a so-called cassette mold. The cassette mold has cassette-like copper plates that rest against the steel charging plates and bound the casting cavity. In principle, it has the advantages that fewer water tanks are needed, that shorter changing times for the cassette-like copper plates are necessary, that conveyance costs are lower due to the lower conveyance weight, and that the service life of molds of this type are longer. Despite these advantages, the cassette mold has the disadvantage of a high hot-side temperature in the meniscus region with a sharp temperature drop below it. This results in a high load of the strand shell on the cast strand and thus the danger of surface defects. In addition, an uneven slag film thickness develops prematurely due to the significantly different hot-side temperature in the upper region of the mold.
Furthermore, it must be assumed on the basis of experience that different mold temperatures are also present along the cast width, which can have a negative effect on the service life of the mold and the surface quality of the cast strand.
The objective of the invention is to propose measures that counteract the high temperatures in the meniscus region of a cassette mold of this type by suitable design of the copper plates and/or the steel charging plates.
In accordance with the invention, this objective is achieved by varying the thickness of the copper plates between the coolant and the hot side of the copper plates over the width and/or over the height. In this way, the hot-side temperature can be evened out over the width of the mold, and the significant temperature drop below the meniscus region can be reduced over the height of the mold.
In one embodiment, the coolant channels run in the copper plate and at least partially in the adjacent steel charging plate. On the one hand, this guarantees equal flow rates in the coolant channels and, on the other hand, the production of the coolant channels in the copper plate and in the steel charging plate is greatly simplified.
The improved heat dissipation in the meniscus region can be still further improved by making the cross section of the coolant channel smaller in the meniscus region than elsewhere in the coolant channel.
In another measure for reducing the hot-side temperature in the meniscus region, the thickness between the coolant channel and the hot-side surface of the copper plate is smaller than it is above and below this region.
Temperature equalization between higher and lower regions within the height of the continuous casting mold is further promoted by limiting the smaller thickness between the coolant channel and the hot-side surface of the copper plate to a certain height section and continuously increasing the thickness to a certain distance in lower sections.
When the coolant channels are suitably incorporated in the steel charging plate, it is provided that the distance of the hot-side surface of the copper plate from the coolant channel is constant in the same height sections.
The arrangement of the coolant channels generally depends on the interior shape of the casting cavity. To this end, it is proposed that in the width section, the distance to the hot-side surface is smaller in the central region than in the peripheral region. This makes it possible to make the temperature of the hot side more uniform.
For this purpose, it is further proposed that grooves in the copper plate which communicate with the coolant channel are formed with groove depths greater than 10 mm and less than 25 mm.
Special molds for casting thin slabs are used in CSP plants. Here it is advantageous that a funnel mold can be used and that the width section with the greatest distance of the coolant channel from the hot-side surface of the copper plate has a length of 50-80% of the width region in the funnel.
In accordance with additional features, an external width region of the funnel cross section is 50-80% of the wide-side length “L” minus half the width of the funnel.
Specific embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the drawings and are described in greater detail below.
In the continuous casting mold, liquid metals, especially liquid steel, are cast into cast strands with various formats and with billet, bloom, slab, and thin-slab cross sections. Opposing steel charging plates 2 and copper plates 3 that rest against the steel charging plates 2 are mounted inside a water tank 1, e.g., fastened with screws 4 to the steel charging plates 2, which form a cassette. The copper plates 3 bound the casting cavity 5. End plates 7, so-called narrow-side plates, are arranged between the copper plates 3. The thickness 8 of the end plates 7 forms the thickness of the cast strand, or the end plates 7 determine the width of the cast strand by the distance that separates them.
Coolant channels 9, each of which is provided with an inlet and an outlet, are incorporated in the copper plates 3 at the boundary with the steel charging plates 2.
In contrast to previous mold copper plates 3, the thickness 10 of the copper plates 3 between the coolant 11 and the hot side 3a of the copper plates 3 varies over the width 2×L and/or over the height 12 of the mold. In the region of the meniscus 13, the thickness 10 of the copper plate 3 is kept smaller than in the deeper, larger region, so that the heat dissipation in the meniscus region 13 is significantly greater than in the deeper region. This results in the establishment of a lower hot-side temperature in the meniscus region.
As is indicated in
In the region of the meniscus 13 (
The coolant channel cross section 14 (
Furthermore, in the meniscus region 13, the thickness 10 of the copper plate 3 between the coolant channel 9 and the hot-side surface 3a of the copper plate 3 is the same at the top and the bottom in
The smaller thickness 10 between the coolant channel 9 and the hot-side surface 3a of the copper plate 3 is limited to the height section H2. This smaller thickness 10 between the coolant channel 9 and the hot-side surface 3a of the copper plate 3 increases continuously to the distance Au, in the sections below the height section H2.
As shown in
In this regard (
When a funnel mold 17 (for CSP plants) is used, the width section L3 with the greater distance D3 of the coolant channel 9 from the hot-side surface 3a of the copper plate 3 has a length of 50-80% of the length region L in the funnel 17a.
An external width region L1 of the copper plates 3 is 50-80% of the wide-side half-length L minus the funnel half-width L3.
The grooves 15 in the width section L1 with the distance DCu1 and the groove depth DP11 are the same as in L2 with DCu2+DP12 and the same as in L3 with DCu3+DP13. The total groove depth is less than 20 mm and greater than 10 mm.
The width sections L are to be dimensioned with L1=0.5-0.8 (L−TF/2), L2=L−(L1+L3), and L3=0.5-0.8 TF/2, where TF/2 is half the funnel width.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
102 26 214 | Jun 2002 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP03/03081 | 3/25/2003 | WO | 00 | 10/17/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/106073 | 12/24/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3125786 | Savage | Mar 1964 | A |
3978910 | Gladwin | Sep 1976 | A |
4658884 | Euler et al. | Apr 1987 | A |
5467810 | Grove | Nov 1995 | A |
5526869 | Sears, Jr. | Jun 1996 | A |
5927378 | Grove et al. | Jul 1999 | A |
6145579 | Stagge et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
6443221 | Suzuki et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6926067 | Horneschemeyer et al. | Aug 2005 | B1 |
20020129922 | Plociennik et al. | Sep 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 025 930 | Aug 2000 | EP |
1 206 986 | May 2002 | EP |
03118943 | May 1991 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060102313 A1 | May 2006 | US |