The disclosure relates to countergravity casting of nickel-based superalloys. More particularly, the disclosure relates to control of sulfur contamination in such casting.
Components used in the hot sections of gas turbine engines are typically formed of cast nickel-based superalloys. U.S. Pat. No. 6,684,934 (the '934 patent) to Cargill et al., Feb. 3, 2004, “Countergravity casting method and apparatus”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein as if set forth at length, discloses a countergravity casting method and apparatus.
Countergravity casting relies on differential pressure or vacuum levels to draw metal from a holding melt vessel up vertically into an inverted casting mold through a sprue nozzle). This process has several advantages over conventional gravity investment casting such as the ability to fill more parts and finer features due to the pressure assistance provided by the differential pressure of vacuum levels. The process returns non-component gating material back to the molten metal crucible to conserve the use of metal for a more efficient process. Because of these advantages, turbine engine hot section components such as combustor liners (floatwall panels), combustor bulkhead panels, and nozzle structural frames have used this process extensively for equiax multicrystalline cast components.
Due to the increase in combustor temperatures and the increased oxidation and corrosion atmosphere of new combustors, single crystal combustor liners are being used and developed to reduce oxidation and enhance thermal fatigue life. To further enhance oxidation life, desulfurized alloys have been used to cast both multicrystalline and single crystal components. Examples are found in U.S. Pat. No. 9,138,963 (the '963 patent) to Cetel et al., Sep. 22, 2015, “Low sulfur nickel base substrate alloy and overlay coating system”, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein as if set forth at length The low sulfur enables the protective coatings to adhere for longer periods of time at temperature. It has been demonstrated that the desulfurizing effect on the alloy can be retained in conventional gravity casting but is lost with the countergravity process for multicrystalline components.
One aspect of the disclosure involves a countergravity casting apparatus comprising: a melting crucible; a casting mold; a flowpath from the melting crucible to the casting mold; and a filter along the flowpath. At least one of: the filter comprises a sulfur-gettering material; and a source of sulfur-gettering particles is upstream of the filter and the filter is effective to filter the sulfur-gettering particles.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include said source of sulfur-gettering particles.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the sulfur gettering ability of the sulfur gettering particles being at least that of 20 weight percent MgO in ZrO2.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the sulfur-gettering particles comprising MgO.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the mold having a cavity shaped to form a gas turbine engine component.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the mold having a cavity shaped to form a gas turbine engine combustor panel.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include a method for using the apparatus. The method comprises: melting a nickel-based superalloy in the melting crucible; introducing the sulfur-gettering particles from the source to the melted nickel-base superalloy upstream of the filter, the sulfur-gettering particles then gettering sulfur to become sulfur-containing particles; disposing the casting mold under subambient pressure on a mold base with a fill tube of said mold extending through an opening in said base; relatively moving said melting vessel and said base to immerse an opening of said fill tube in the melted nickel-based superalloy in said melting vessel and to engage said melting vessel and said base with seal means therebetween such that a sealed gas pressurizable space is formed between the melted nickel-based superalloy and said base; and gas pressurizing said space to establish a pressure differential on the melted nickel-based superalloy to force it upwardly through said fill tube into said casting mold, the melted nickel-based superalloy passing through the filter which filters the sulfur-containing particles.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves an apparatus for countergravity casting a metallic material. The apparatus comprises: a melting vessel having at least a surface layer of a sulfur-gettering material of greater sulfur-gettering ability than alumina and zirconia; a casting chamber for containing a mold; a fill tube capable of extending into the melting vessel to communicate melted metallic material to the casting chamber; a gas source coupled a headspace of the melting vessel to allow the gas source to pressurize said headspace to establish a pressure differential to force the melted metallic material upwardly through said fill tube into said mold.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the sulfur gettering ability being at least that of 20 weight percent MgO in ZrO2.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the mold having a cavity shaped to form a gas turbine engine component.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the mold having a cavity shaped to form a gas turbine engine combustor panel.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the sulfur-gettering material comprising MgO.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a method for modifying a countergravity casting apparatus from a first condition to a second condition. In the first condition the countergravity casting apparatus has sulfur contamination of cast metallic material. The method comprises at least one of: replacing an oil-sealed pump with an oil-less pump; adding at least a sulfur-gettering layer to a crucible; adding at least a sulfur-gettering layer to a mold; adding a sulfur-gettering filter; adding a contaminant trap along a vacuum flowpath through a vacuum pump; reducing contaminants in a pressurizing gas source; adding sulfur-gettering material along a fill tube; and adding a source of particulate sulfur-gettering material.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a method for countergravity casting a nickel-based superalloy. The method comprises: melting the nickel-based superalloy; disposing a mold under subambient pressure on a mold base with a fill tube of said mold extending through an opening in said base; relatively moving said melting vessel and said base to immerse an opening of said fill tube in the melted nickel-based superalloy in said melting vessel and to engage said melting vessel and said base with seal means therebetween such that a sealed gas pressurizable space is formed between the melted nickel-based superalloy and said base; and gas pressurizing said space to establish a pressure differential on the melted nickel-based superalloy to force it upwardly through said fill tube into said mold, the melted nickel-based superalloy passing through a filter which at least one of: reduces sulfur content of the passed melted nickel-based superalloy; and filters sulfur-containing particles.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include introducing sulfur-gettering particles to the melted nickel-base superalloy upstream of the filter, the sulfur-gettering particles then gettering sulfur to become the sulfur-containing particles.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the filter comprising a sulfur-gettering material.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include solidifying the melted nickel-base superalloy to block the fill tube.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves an apparatus for countergravity casting a metallic material. The apparatus comprises: a crucible for holding melted metallic material; a casting chamber for containing a mold; a fill tube capable of extending into the crucible to communicate melted metallic material to the casting chamber; and a gas source coupled a headspace of the melting vessel to allow the gas source to pressurize said headspace to establish a pressure differential to force the melted metallic material upwardly through said fill tube into said mold, wherein at least one of: the crucible has at least a sulfur-gettering layer; the mold has at least a sulfur-gettering layer; the apparatus further comprises as a sulfur-gettering filter; the apparatus further comprises a contaminant trap along a vacuum flowpath through a vacuum pump; reducing contaminants in a pressurizing gas source; the fill tube has at least a sulfur-gettering layer; the apparatus further comprises a source of sulfur-gettering material for exposure to a vacuum environment within the system; and the apparatus further comprises a source of particulate sulfur-gettering material for introduction to the melted material.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves an apparatus for countergravity casting a metallic material. The apparatus comprises: a crucible for holding melted metallic material; a casting chamber for containing a mold; a fill tube capable of extending into the crucible to communicate melted metallic material to the casting chamber; a gas source coupled a headspace of the melting vessel to allow the gas source to pressurize said headspace to establish a pressure differential to force the melted metallic material upwardly through said fill tube into said mold; and means for gettering sulfur.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the means comprising material having sulfur gettering ability at least that of 20 weight percent MgO in ZrO2.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the means comprising at least one of MgO and CaO.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the means comprising a filter.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include the means comprising a ceramic filter.
Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include methods for casting wherein the means getters sulfur. Further embodiments of any of the foregoing embodiments may additionally and/or alternatively include methods for remanufacturing or reengineering an apparatus or configuration thereof to add the means.
Another aspect of the disclosure involves a method for countergravity casting a nickel-based superalloy. The method comprises: melting the nickel-based superalloy; disposing a mold under subambient pressure on a mold base with a fill tube of said mold extending through an opening in said base; relatively moving said melting vessel and said base to immerse an opening of said fill tube in the melted nickel-based superalloy in said melting vessel; gas pressurizing a space to establish a pressure differential on the melted nickel-based superalloy to force it upwardly through said fill tube into said mold; and a step for removing sulfur. The details of one or more embodiments are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
For purposes of illustration, the drawings are a markup of those of the '934 patent as an exemplary baseline with added detail views.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
It is suspected that the countergravity casting sulfur contamination is due to the long duration of melting in a holding vessel and the general pickup of sulfur from the refractories, molten pool, equipment, and environment. In conventional vacuum (or protective atmosphere) casting, a small amount of metal is melted and then immediately used for a single pour. Countergravity may cast several (e.g., five to ten) sequential molds from the same melt crucible. Also, upon pressure release after a given mold is full, excess material in the sprue will return to the source. Any contaminants acquired by this returned/reclaimed excess material may contaminate subsequent draws of the metal.
Below, a number of techniques are disclosed for reducing sulfur contamination of the part(s) being cast by reducing sulfur introduction at various stages and/or removing sulfur contaminants from the alloy. These may be used in any physically possible combination.
An exemplary goal is to avoid casting the part with sulfur levels above those (if any) of the source superalloy ingots. However, this does not preclude use to merely limit any increase in sulfur content to an acceptable amount. It also does not preclude use to reduce sulfur content below that of the source superalloy ingots.
Exemplary implementations are discussed relative to the system and methods of the '934 patent and what are believed to be further details of that system's construction. Nevertheless, similar modifications may be made to other countergravity systems. Exemplary implementations involve particular alloys in the table of the '963 patent and the more generic ranges of alloy compositions in the '963 patent.
The '934 patent identifies crucible material for melting metal being alumina or zirconia ceramic. A first area for modification is to form the crucible from or to include a sulfur-gettering material such as MgO. Alumina and zirconia have some gettering ability, but a greater gettering ability is desirable. Other such sulfur gettering materials include CaO, LaO, Y2O3, or other rare earth element oxide(s) with greater sulfur affinity than ZrO2.
The MgO may represent a surface layer 1000 (added
The crucible or its substrate may be made by slip casting, injection molding, powder densification, or slurry dipping (as discussed for molds below). When a layer is used, it may be made via initial dipping in a slurry process or by spraying or painting into a substrate or slip casting in a substrate or other coating technique.
Similarly, the casting mold itself may be modified to include such a sulfur-gettering material. Because the casting molds are typically single-use items and also made of ceramic, different circumstances may attend molds vs. crucibles. The mold may include the sulfur-gettering material as a thin layer 1010 (added
The layer may be applied by sequentially dipping an investment casting pattern in a gettering media slurry to form a prime coat. Exemplary dipping is in an MgO slurry (e.g., using a colloidal binder system such as silica or alumina as carrier). The typical particle sizes of the ceramic component of the slurry is 200 to 300 mesh but can be larger or smaller depending on the metal cast and the desired surface finish. The slurry dip is immediately followed by an application of dry stucco ceramic particulates with are impinged on the still-wet slurry. The dry stucco particulates can be MgO or another sulfur-gettering rare earth oxide. The slurry/stucco combination form the primecoat of the casting mold and will be the layer in contact with the molten metal during casting. After the slurry and stucco is applied, the mold is intermittently dried under controlled temperature and humidity.
Several dips may be applied to form multiple layers of primecoat. Then several layers of bulk material are applied on top of the prime layer(s) which have larger particle sizes of ceramic component in the slurry and stucco. This builds up a thickness of ceramic shell that can hold up to the casting process. The shell may be formed via further dips of alternative material (e.g., in alumina, silica, and the like—again likely via suspension slurry and dry backup dips). After pattern dewax (e.g., steam autoclave after drying) and shell firing, the prime coat forms a lining of the shell/mold that contacts the poured molten alloy. During casting, the lining attracts sulfur from the cast alloy and/or prevents additional pickup of sulfur to enter the alloy. Other such prime coats include Y2O3, CaO, LaO, ZrO2 or any of the rare earth element oxides discussed above. This may replace or line a baseline shell of alumina, alumino-silicate, mullite, silica or ZrSiO4. The silicon in the colloidal silica slurry forms a glassy oxide upon firing to provide crushability to accommodate molten metal solidification. The colloidal silica in the slurry will provide such silicon for the layer. Thus, use of colloidal silica does not have this benefit if used in creating a similar layer on a crucible and is more likely to be replaced by an aqueous or alcohol carrier for the MgO, etc.
Other ceramic components that may be similarly modified include the snout or fill tube (16 of the '934 patent) which transfers metal from the lower melt chamber to the upper mold chamber, the ceramic (refractory) packing material that surrounds the melting crucible and induction coil (5r in the '934 patent already identified as MgO thus the atmospheric exposure of such a baseline may be increased (e.g., increasing surface area by making porous or by expanding the footprint) and the purity may be increased to improve gettering.), the refractory material embedded between the induction coil turns (e.g., radial outward extensions of the material 5L of the '934 patent which are illustrated as metal pieces in the '934 patent), and any ceramic filters in the system. The filters may desulfurize by filtering out particles of gettering material that have acquired sulfur or by merely providing an enhanced surface area of gettering material (e.g., while potentially filtering out other solids).
Thus, whereas the baseline snout may be made of silica or zirconia, a revised snout may be made of or include a layer 1020 (added
Although the '934 patent does not mention filters, one containing the gettering material could be added (e.g., a filter 1030 (added
Another area is adding a separate source 1040 (
In one area of variations on the particulate introduction, rather than filtering the gettering media, sufficient vacuum levels can be reached to volatize the gettering media and the adsorbed contaminants from the molten metal.
Another area/technique is to disperse containers 1062 (
Another area/technique is to reduce or eliminate additional sulfur production/release within the apparatus. This may involve ensuring all pumps used to evacuate air in the metal or mold chamber are free of oil or other contaminants like grease which can contain sulfur. To effectively do this, oil-less or dry vacuum pumps can be used. There are several types of dry pumps including claw & hook pumps, screw pumps, and lobe pumps which do not use oil. This may be counterintuitive in that the pumps are used to depressurize rather than pressurize. Nevertheless, they may be a source of contamination via backstreaming. Several pumps can be combined in parallel or series. Pumps can be of a variety of types and capacities such as single stage rotary vane pumps, diaphragm pumps, oil-free scroll pumps, dry compressing multi-stage roots pumps, dry compressing screw pumps and systems, roots blower pumps, diffusion pumps and turbomolecular pumps. These come in a variety of pumping speeds and capacity to achieve desired process time (eg 1000 to 100,000 l/s) and vacuum levels (e.g., <10−1 to 10-7 mbar.)
For example, the '934 patent shows a first pumping system 23 for the melting compartment 1 as having a rotary oil-sealed vacuum pump 23a, a ring jet booster pump 23b, and a rotary vane holding pump 23e. Two second pumping systems 24a and 24b may evacuate the casting compartment 3 and may operate in parallel or tandem. Each includes a rotary oil-sealed vacuum pump and a Roots-type blower to provide an initial vacuum level of roughly 50 microns and below in casting compartment 3 when isolation valve 2 is closed.
An exemplary modification of the '934 patent's system involves replacing pumping systems 23, 24a and 24b each with oil-less mechanical, booster, and diffusion pumps, with oil traps.
Another area/technique is to ensure the melting and casting environments are sufficiently free of air. Oil-containing vacuum and diffusion pumps may be modified with traps. Traps include: condensation (e.g., cold) traps (e.g., baffles like chevron baffles); absorbent (so-called “room temperature”) traps; and adsorbent traps. Condensation to prevent backstreaming of contaminants (e.g., oil) allows higher vacuum levels (lower amounts of air) to be achieved in that reduced contaminants mean the pumping of air competes less with pumping of contaminants. One exemplary location for such a trap is between pumps 23a and 23b of the '934 patent. Another location is between 24a and mold chamber 3, and at location 24h. Locations are dependent on the sequence and types of pumps chosen.
Reduction of sulfur generation/release would also apply to other mechanical components in the system such as hydraulic cylinders, valves, and seals where an electrical or pneumatic component could be substituted for a hydraulic. Examples in the '934 patent include hydraulic cylinders 4, 8, 14b, 35, 37, 72 and hydraulic actuator 14b. Examples in '934 patent of valves are 2, and 19d.
Another area/technique is to ensure there is no additional sulfur added to the apparatus through use of gases to provide the differential pressure to push the metal upward into the casting mold (countergravity). To accomplish this, special low sulfur protective gases like argon and helium should be used or the differential pressure could be created by different vacuum pressure levels without introducing additional gases. Although the '934 patent at col. 5, line 25 mentions argon, extra care could be taken to ensure extremely low sulfur levels in the argon or other gas and extreme lack of moisture (which moisture might produce oxygen to react with materials such as graphite and aerate any sulfur that was contained in the graphite).
Another area/technique is to change the sequence of the typical casting process to purify the metal. The current countergravity casting method relies on differential pressure to push the molten metal upward into the casting mold, holding for a short period of time until the castings and ingots are solid, and then releases pressure to dump the unsolidified metal within the snout or fill tube to fall back down into the melting crucible for reuse. This practice exposes the molten metal to mold material and environments that could allow sulfur pickup which would lead to contaminating the low sulfur metal contained in the melting crucible. To prevent sulfur pickup, the metal can be held for a longer period of time to solidify the metal in the snout. In this case, the snout could not be reused but the remaining molten metal in the crucible would not be contaminated. The snout would become a consumable item replaced with each use.
Details of the '934 patent as an example of one baseline are given below.
A melting chamber or compartment 1 is connected by a primary isolation valve 2, such as a sliding gate valve, to a casting chamber or compartment 3. The melting compartment 1 comprises a double-walled, water-cooled construction with both walls made of stainless steel. Casting compartment 3 is a mild steel, single wall construction. Shown adjacent to the melting compartment 1 is a melting vessel location control cylinder 4 which moves hollow shaft 4d connected to a shunted melting vessel 5 horizontally from the melting compartment 1 into the casting compartment 3 along a pair of tracks 6 (one track shown) that extend from the compartment 1 to the compartment 3.
The melting vessel 5 is disposed on a trolley 5t having front, middle, and rear pairs of wheels 5w that ride on the tracks 6. The steel frame of the trolley 5t is bolted to the melting vessel and to the end of shaft 4d. The tracks 6 are interrupted at the isolation valve 2. The interruption in the tracks 6 is narrow enough that the trolley 5t can travel over the interruption in the tracks 6 at the isolation valve 2 as it moves between the compartments 1 and 3 without simultaneously disengaging more than one pair of the wheels 5w.
The control cylinder 4 includes a cylinder chamber 4a fixed to apparatus steel frame F at location L and a cylinder rod 4b connected to a wheeled platform structure 4c that includes front and rear, upper and lower pairs of wheels 4w that ride on a pair of parallel rails 4r1 above and below the rails,
When the melting compartment 1 has been opened by a hydraulic cylinder 8 powering opening of the dish-shaped end wall 1a of the melting compartment to ambient atmosphere, the melting vessel 5 can be disengaged from the trolley tracks 6 and inverted or rotated by a direct drive electric motor and gear drive system 7 disposed on platform structure 4c. The rotational electric motor and gear drive system 7 includes a gear 7a that drives a gear 7b on the hollow shaft 4d to effect rotation thereof. Electrical control of the direct drive motor is provided from a hand-held pendent (not shown) by a worker/operator. The melting vessel 5 can be inverted or rotated as necessary to clean, repair or replace the crucible C therein,
A gas pressurization conduit 4h,
As mentioned above, rotational motion of the melting vessel 5 is provided by direct drive electric motor 7c and gears 7a, 7b of drive system 7 that may be activated when the melting compartment 1 has been opened by the hydraulic cylinder 8 powering such opening. In particular, the cylinder chamber 8a is affixed to a pair of parallel rails 8r that are firmly mounted to the floor. The cylinder rod 8b connects to the rail-mounted movable apparatus frame F at F1 where it connects to the dish-shaped end wall 1a of the melting compartment 1. The melting compartment end wall 1a can be moved by cylinder 8 horizontally away from main melting compartment wall 1b at a vacuum-tight seal 1c after clamps 1d are released to provide access to the melting compartment; for example, to clean or replace the crucible C in the melting vessel 5. The seal 1c remains on melting compartment wall 1b. The support frame F and end wall 1a are supported by front and rear pairs of wheels 8w on parallel rails 8r during movement by cylinder 8.
A conventional hydraulic unit 22 is shown in
In
The vacuum pumping system 23 for the melting compartment 1 comprises three commercially available pumps to achieve desired negative (subambient) pressure; namely, a Stokes 412 microvac rotary oil-sealed vacuum pump 23a, a ring jet booster pump 23b, and a rotary vane holding pump 23c operated to provide vacuum level of 50 microns and below (e.g. 10 microns or less) in melting compartment 1 when isolation valve 2 is closed.
A temperature measurement and control instrumentation device 19 is provided at the melting compartment 1,
An ingot charging device 20 is illustrated in
When the melt vessel 5 is ready to be charged, a preheated ingot I (preheated to remove any moisture from the ingot) is loaded onto the ingot-loading assembly 20d. The ingot-loading assembly 20d is then swung into the chamber 20a. The chain hoist 20b is lowered into position so that hook 20k engages ingot loop LL. The hoist 20b is then raised to take the ingot I off from ingot-loading assembly 20d. The ingot-loading assembly 20d is swung out of the chamber 20a. The door 20e then is closed and sealed. At this point, vacuum is applied to the chamber 20a by vacuum pumping system 24a and 24b via vacuum conduits 24c and 24d (
The hoist speed is then slowed down so that the ingot is preheated as it is lowered into the crucible C. When the ingot is in the crucible, the weight is automatically released from the chain hoist hook 20k by upward pressure from the crucible or molten metallic material in the crucible. A counterweight 20w on the hook 20k,
The hoist 20b is then raised and the load valve 20f is closed. The procedure is repeated to charge additional individual ingots into the melting vessel until the crucible C is fully charged. A sight-glass 20g,
When the melting vessel 5 has been pulled out of the melt chamber 1 for crucible cleaning, a full load of ingots can be placed in the crucible C before the melting vessel 5 is returned to the melt chamber 1. This eliminates the need to charge ingots one at a time for the first charge. After the melting vessel 5 is charged with ingots at the ingot charging device 20, it is moved to the instrumentation device 19 where the ingots are melted by energization of the induction coil 11.
Referring to
The shunt rings 5b, 5c and tie-rod members 5d comprise a plurality of alternate iron laminations 5i and phenolic resin insulating laminations 5p to this end. A flux shield 5sh made of electrical insulating material is disposed beneath the lower-shunt ring 5c.
A closed end cylindrical (or other shape) ceramic crucible C is disposed in the steel shell 5a in a bed of refractory material 5r that is located inwardly of the induction coil 11. The ceramic crucible C can comprise an alumina or a zirconia ceramic crucible when nickel base superalloys are being melted and cast. Other ceramic crucible materials can be used depending upon the metal or alloy being melted and cast. The crucible C can be formed by cold pressing ceramic powders and firing.
The crucible is positioned in bed 5r of loose, binderless refractory particles, such as magnesium oxide ceramic particles of roughly 200 mesh size. The bed 5r of loose refractory particles is contained in a thin-wall resin-bonded refractory particulate coil grouting 51, such as resin-bonded alumina-silica ceramic particles of roughly 60 mesh size, that is disposed adjacent the induction coil 11,
The resin-bonded liner 51 is formed by hand application and drying, and then the loose refractory particulates of bed 5r are introduced to the bottom of the liner 51. The crucible C then is placed on the bottom loose refractory particulates and the space between the vertical sidewall of the crucible C and the vertical sidewall of the liner 51 is filled in with loose refractory particulates of bed 5r.
An annular gas pressurization chamber-forming member 5s is fastened by suitable circumferentially spaced apart fasteners 5j and annular seal 5v atop the shell 5a. The member 5s includes an upper circumferential flange 5z, a large diameter circular central opening 501 and a lower smaller diameter circular opening 502 adjacent the upper open end of the crucible C and defining a central space SP. Water cooling passages 5pp are provided in the member 5s, which is made of stainless steel. The water cooling passages 5pp receive cooling water from water piping 5p contained within the hollow shaft 4d. The return water runs through a similar second water piping (not shown) located directly behind piping 5p.
Gas pressurization conduit 4h extends to the melting vessel 5 and is communicated to the central space SP of the member 5s and to the space around the outside of the melting induction coil 11 to avoid creation of a different pressure across the crucible C. Similarly, vacuum conduit 4v extends to the melting vessel 5 and is communicated to the central space SP of the member 5s and to the space around the outside of the melting induction coil 11 in a manner similar to that shown for conduit 4h in
In practice of the process, after the melting vessel 5 is charged with ingots at the ingot charging device 20, it is moved to the instrumentation device 19 where the ingots are melted in the melting compartment 1 under a full vacuum (e.g. 10 microns or less) by energization of the induction coil 11 to this end to form a bath of molten metallic material M in the crucible C. The vacuum conduit 4v,
When the ingots have been melted in the melting vessel 5, a preheated ceramic mold 15 is loaded into casting chamber or compartment 3 isolated by valve 2 from the melting compartment 1. The casting compartment 3 comprises an upper chamber 3a and lower chamber 3b having a loading/unloading sealable door 3c,
The mold base 13,
An annular seal SMB1 comprising seal means is disposed between the mold base 13 and the flange 5z of the melting vessel 5. The seal is adapted to be sealed between the mold base 13 and the flange 5z of the melting vessel 5 to provide a gas tight-seal when the mold base 13 and melting vessel 5 are engaged as described below. One or multiple seals SMB1 can be provided between the mold base 13 and melting vessel 5 to this end. The mold base seal SMB1 can comprise a silicone material. The seal SMB1 typically is disposed on the lower surface 13e of the mold base 13 so that it is compressed when the mold base and melting vessel are engaged, although the seal SMB1 can alternately, or in addition, be disposed on the flange 5z of the melting vessel 5. A similar seal SMB2 is provided on the lower end flange 31c of a mold bonnet 31, and/or upper surface 13d of mold base 13, to provide a gas-tight seal between the mold base 13 and mold bonnet 31.
The mold base 13 is adapted to receive a preheated mold-to-base ceramic fiber seal or gasket MS1 about the opening 13a and a preheated ceramic mold 15 and a preheated snout or fill tube 16. The preheated mold 15 with fill tube 16 is positioned on the mold base 13 with the fill tube 16 extending through the opening 13a beyond the lowermost surface 13e of the mold base 13 and with the bottom of the mold 15 sitting on a second seal MS2, a ceramic fiber gasket which seals the mold 15 and the fill tube 16.
The ceramic mold 15 can be gas permeable or gas impermeable. A gas permeable mold can be formed by the well-known lost wax process where a wax or other fugitive pattern is repeatedly dipped in a slurry of fine ceramic powder in water or organic carrier, drained of excess slurry, and then stuccoed or sanded with coarser ceramic particles to build up a gas permeable shell mold of suitable wall thickness on the pattern. A gas impermeable mold 15 can be formed using solid mold materials, or by the use in the lost wax process of finer ceramic particles in the slurries and/or the stuccoes to form a shell mold of such dense wall structure as to be essentially gas impermeable. In the lost wax process, the pattern is selectively removed from the shell mold by conventional thermal pattern removal operation such as flash dewaxing by heating, dissolution or other known pattern removal techniques. The green shell mold then can be fired at elevated temperature to develop mold strength for casting.
In practicing the process, the ceramic mold 15 typically is formed to have a central sprue 15a that communicates to the fill tube 16 and supplies molten metallic material to a plurality of mold cavities 15b via side gates 15c arranged about the sprue 15a along its length as shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,863,706 and 3,900,064, the teachings of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The support arm 14c loaded with mold base 13 and mold 15 thereon is pivoted into chamber 3 with the access door 3c open and is placed on support posts 3d fixed to the floor of the lower chamber 3b,
In the upper chamber 3a of the casting compartment is a double-walled, water cooled mold hood or bonnet 31 that is lowered onto the mold base 13 about the mold 15,
The flange 31c has fastened thereto a plurality (e.g. 4) of circumferentially spaced apart, commercially available argon-actuated toggle lock clamps 34 (available as clamp model No. 895 from DE-STA-CO) that are actuated to clamp the melting vessel 5 and mold base 13 together during countergravity casting in a manner described below. The toggle lock clamps 34 receive argon from a source outside compartment 3 via a common conduit 34c that extends in hollow extension 31b,
The hollow extension 31b of the mold bonnet 31 is connected to a pair of hydraulic cylinders 35 in a manner permitting the mold bonnet 31 to move up and down relative to the casting compartment 3. The hydraulic cylinder rods 35b are mounted on a stationary mounting flange 3e of chamber 3. The cylinder chambers 35a connect to the mold bonnet extension 31b at the flange 3f, which moves vertically with the actuation of the cylinders and raises or lowers the mold bonnet. The mold bonnet extension 31b moves through a vacuum-tight seal SR relative to the casting compartment 3.
A hydraulic cylinder 37 also is mounted on the upper end of the mold bonnet extension 31b and includes cylinder chamber 37a and cylinder rod 37b that is moved in the mold bonnet extension 31b to raise or lower the mold clamp 17. In particular, after the mold bonnet 31 is lowered and locked with the mold base 13, the cylinder 37 lowers the mold clamp 17 against the top of the mold 15 in the bonnet 31 to clamp the mold 15 and seals MS1 and MS2 against the mold base 13,
The casting compartment 3 is evacuated using conventional vacuum pumping systems 24a and 24b shown in
The vacuum pumping systems 24a and 24b singly or in tandem, individually or simultaneously, evacuate the upper chamber 3a of the casting compartment 3 via conduits 24g, 24h, the ingot charging device 20 described above via branch conduits 24c, 24d and the temperature measurement device 19 via a flexible conduit (not shown) connecting with conduit 24d. The vacuum pumping systems 24a and 24b also evacuate the mold bonnet extension 31b via a pair of flexible conduits 24e (one shown in
Operation of the apparatus detailed above will now be described with respect to
After the mold base 13 is placed in the casting chamber 3a, the mold bonnet 31 is lowered by cylinders 35 to align the locking screws 13b in the slot openings 33b of the locking ring 33. The worker then rotates (partially turns) the locking ring 33 to lock the mold base 13 against the mold bonnet 31 by cam surfaces 33s engaging locking screw heads 13h. The mold clamp 17 is lowered by cylinder 37 to engage and hold the mold 15 and seals MS1, MS2 against the mold base 13. The mold base 13 and mold bonnet 31 form a mold chamber MC with mold 15 therein when clamped together. The clamped mold base/bonnet 13/31 then are lifted back into the upper chamber 3a of the casting compartment 3, and the mold base support arm 14c is swung away by the worker so that the casting compartment door 3c can be closed and vacuum tight sealed by closure and locking of the door using door clamps 3j,
When melting of the ingots in crucible C is completed and the melt is brought to the required casting temperature as determined by temperature measurement instrumentation 19 and after achieving the necessary vacuum level in the melting and casting compartments 1, 3, the isolation valve 2 is opened by its air actuated cylinder 2a. The melting vessel 5 with molten metallic material therein is moved on tracks 6 by actuation of cylinder 4 into the casting compartment 3 beneath the mold base/bonnet 13/31,
The mold base/bonnet 13/31 then are lowered onto the melting vessel 5,
First, the vertical movement of the mold base/bonnet immerses the mold fill tube 16 into the molten metallic material M present as a pool in crucible C.
Second, engagement and clamping of the mold base 13 to the flange 5z of melting vessel 5 creates a sealed gas pressurizable space SP between the top surface of the molten metallic material M and the bottom surface 13e of the mold base 13. The seal SMB1 is compressed between the mold base 13 and flange 5z of the melting vessel to provide a as-tight seal to this end. This small (e.g. typically 1,000 cubic inches) space SP and space around the induction coil 11 of the melting vessel 5 is then pressurized through argon gas supply conduit 4h via opening of valve VA and closing vacuum conduit valve VV, while the compartments 1, 3 continue to be evacuated to 10 microns or less, thereby creating a pressure differential on the molten metallic material M in the crucible C required to force or “push” the molten metallic material upwardly through the fill tube 16 into the mold cavities 15b via the sprue 15a and side gates 15c. The argon pressurizing gas is typically provided at a gas pressure up to 2 atmospheres, such as 1 to 2 atmospheres, in the space SP. Maintenance of the positive argon pressure in the sealed space SP typically is continued for the specified casting cycle, during which time the metallic material in mold cavities 15b and a portion of the mold side gates 15c but typically not the sprue 15a has solidified. The melting vessel 5 is constructed to be pressure tight when sealed to the mold base 13 during the gas pressurization step using conduit 4h or vacuum tight during the evacuation step using vacuum conduit 4v described next.
After termination of the gas pressure by closing valve VA, the space SP and space around the induction coil 11 of the melting vessel 5 are evacuated using vacuum conduit 4v with valve VV open to equalize subambient pressure between sealable space SP and the compartments 1, 3. Remaining molten metallic material within the mold sprue 15a then can flow back into the crucible C and thereby be available, still in liquid form, for use in the casting of the next mold. The toggle lock clamps 34 are de-pressurized, permitting the mold base/bonnet 13/31 to be raised from the melting vessel 5, withdrawing the fill tube 16 from the molten metallic material in the crucible C. A drip pan 70 then is positioned by hydraulic cylinder 72 under the mold base 13 to catch any remaining drips of molten metallic material from the fill tube 16,
At this point in the casting cycle and as shown in
The baseline countergravity process purports advantages over prior processes in that the mold 15 is filled with liquid metallic material while the mold is still under vacuum (e.g. 10 microns or less subambient pressure). There is, therefore, no resistance to the entry of metal into the mold cavities created by any sort of gas back pressure within the mold. It is no longer necessary that the mold wall be gas permeable to permit the escape of gases and the entry of metal. Entirely gas impermeable molds can be cast without difficulty, opening many new options with respect to the production of the mold itself, and making process combinations possible which were previously not practical. Further, as stated previously, substantially less interstitial gas, with the potential to form gas bubbles as a result of thermal expansion, remains in ceramic porosity, either in the mold wall or in preformed ceramic cores, such that casting scrap rates are reduced.
The molten metallic material returning from the sprue of the cast mold to the crucible is cleaner than similar recycled material from previous processes, because it, too, has been exposed to less evolved reactive gas during the casting cycle. This is revealed by the relative absence of accumulated dross floating on the surface of the metal remaining in the crucible following a similar number of casting cycles. Additionally, the gas pressurization of the small space above the melt which creates the pressure differential lifting the metal up into the mold can be accomplished more quickly, allowing complete molds to be filled faster, and therefore thinner cast sections to be filled. Greater consistency can be achieved between cavity fill rates at different heights on the same mold because of the elimination of available mold surface area and mold permeability as variables in the mechanics controlling the rate of pressure change within the mold. Pressure differentials greater than one atmosphere can be utilized in the practice of the process. This permits the casting of taller components than could otherwise be produced due to the limitation on how high metal can be lifted by a pressure differential of not more than one atmosphere. It can also assist the feeding of porosity created during casting solidification as a result of the shrinkage which takes place in most alloys as they transition from liquid to solid. This increased pressure can force liquid to continue to progress through the solidification front to fill porosity voids that tend to be left behind. When applied to its full potential, the baseline countergravity process permits the use of smaller or fewer gates, resulting in additional cost reduction. It can also potentially eliminate the need for hot isostatic pressing (HIP'ing) as a means of microporosity elimination, achieving still further cost reduction.
Although the mold bonnet 31 is shown enclosing the mold 15 on mold base 13 and carrying the mold clamp 17, the mold bonnet may be omitted if the mold clamp 17 can otherwise be supported in a manner to clamp the mold 15 onto the mold base 13. That is, the mold 15 on the mold base 13 can communicate directly to casting compartment 3 without the intervening mold bonnet 31 in an alternative embodiment of the baseline process and associated apparatus. Moreover, the baseline envisioned locating the melting compartment 1 below the casting compartment 3 in a manner described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,900,064 such that the melting vessel 5 is moved upwardly into the casting compartment to engage and seal with a mold base 13 positioned therein to form the gas pressurizable space to countergravity molten metallic material into a mold on the mold base.
The use of “first”, “second”, and the like in the following claims is for differentiation within the claim only and does not necessarily indicate relative or absolute importance or temporal order. Similarly, the identification in a claim of one element as “first” (or the like) does not preclude such “first” element from identifying an element that is referred to as “second” (or the like) in another claim or in the description.
Where a measure is given in English units followed by a parenthetical containing SI or other units, the parenthetical's units are a conversion and should not imply a degree of precision not found in the English units.
One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when applied to an existing baseline casting method and casting system configuration, details of such baseline may influence details of particular implementations. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/599,646, filed Oct. 11, 2019, and entitled “Countergravity Casting Apparatus and Desulfurization Methods” which is a divisional of International Application No. PCT/US2018/057675, filed Oct. 26, 2018, and entitled “Countergravity Casting Apparatus and Desulfurization Methods”, which claims benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/578,226, filed Oct. 27, 2017, and entitled “Countergravity Casting Apparatus and Desulfurization Methods”, the disclosure of which applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety as if set forth at length.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62578226 | Oct 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16599646 | Oct 2019 | US |
Child | 17866387 | US | |
Parent | PCT/US2018/057675 | Oct 2018 | US |
Child | 16599646 | US |