The invention relates to the field of pumps designed to pump molten metal and to treat the molten metal with gas.
One type of pump for pumping molten metal rotates an impeller on the end of a shaft inside an impeller chamber of a base submerged in the molten metal. The impeller chamber may include a volute or may be a nonvolute chamber as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,203,681. The pump may be used to circulate molten metal or to transfer molten metal. In a circulation pump, a discharge passageway extends from the impeller chamber to an exterior surface of the base. In a transfer pump, the base includes a socket that receives a riser or conduit that extends to another location where it is desired to move the molten metal. The discharge passageway extends from the impeller chamber to the socket.
It has been proposed to introduce reactive and/or inert gas into molten metal for various metallurgical and processing purposes at different locations in and around the pump. For example, gas has been fed into the molten metal along a conduit at a pump discharge passageway downstream of an impeller chamber. However, this design does not efficiently mix the gas and molten metal and unmixed gas can be liberated from the molten metal bath, which wastes gas and can cause safety problems in the case of toxic chlorine gas. Gas has also been introduced along a passageway in a motor driven shaft for release from an impeller mounted to the end of the shaft, inside the impeller chamber. However, this requires effective seals in view of the travel of gas along a rotating shaft. In addition, introducing gas directly into the impeller chamber, while efficiently mixing the gas and molten metal, can cause cavitation that can lead to serious wear or destruction of pump components including the shaft and impeller. Thus, conventional feeding of gas to a pump for molten metal is impractical or inefficient. Gas has also been injected along a lance supported in the molten metal upstream of an inlet protector.
A pump for pumping molten metal proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,786,230 by the inventor included two discharge passages extending from an outlet passage. The outlet passage communicates with two impeller chambers. Two impellers were proposed to be mounted on a motor driven shaft for simultaneous rotation in the impeller chambers. The gas was proposed for use in very small quantities for changing the direction of the molten metal flow, not for treating molten metal with gas.
The present invention features gas mixing and/or dispersement in pumps for pumping molten metal. A first embodiment features a pump for mixing gas/molten metal and pumping molten metal. Impeller members are disposed in mixing and pumping impeller chambers. The pump can include any suitable impeller, for example: vaned, barrel type, squirrel cage type; rotor or other device for applying force to move molten metal. The impeller can be perforated or not, single or dual intake. Gas travels along a passageway leading from a gas source and is directed into the mixing chamber where it is mixed with molten metal. Molten metal is pumped from the pumping impeller chamber. The mixing chamber is the lower chamber and the pumping chamber is the upper chamber, or vice versa. The upper and lower chambers are stacked and aligned with each other such that a shaft on which the impeller members are supported rotates the impeller members in both impeller chambers. A single impeller that rotates on a single shaft in both chambers is suitable or separate impellers may be used, one in each chamber. The mixing and pumping chambers need not be axially aligned; for example, they can be located beside each other in which case separate shafts could be used. Even if the impeller chambers are stacked and aligned so as to receive one shaft, the impeller members need not be at the same geometric position in each impeller chamber. The pump can include common or separate pump inlets and outlets extending to and leading from the impeller chambers. These inlets and outlets can be located at different positions or at the same position in one impeller chamber compared to another impeller chamber.
The first and second impeller chambers can be isolated from significant molten metal communication between them using a web or gasket in the base that separates the first and second impeller chambers and a close tolerance between the impeller and web. Suitable bearing components on the shaft, impeller and components that contact the shaft and impeller, may be used in the present invention in a known manner. The first and second impeller chambers can include a generally spiral shaped volute as known in the art or they can be nonvolute. One impeller chamber can include a volute and the other can be a nonvolute impeller chamber. In a particular aspect of the invention a volute is disposed in both impeller chambers. The volute may be an integral part of the pump that is machined into it or it may be an insert used in the impeller chamber. Volutes offer the advantage of increased pumping efficiency or greater pumping flow rates compared to pumps having no volute. All pump components that are subjected to the molten metal environment are composed of materials suitable for this purpose, for example, graphite or silicon carbide, or other suitable refractory or nonmetallic material.
Gas that is directed into the mixing chamber can cause cavitation. Cavitation is normally disadvantageous to pumps and pump components due to the wear or damage it imposes on them. However, while not wanting to be bound by theory, in the present invention the detrimental effects of cavitation in the gas/molten metal mixing chamber are counterbalanced by rotating the impeller in the pumping chamber where there is no significant cavitation. Even if there are some detrimental effects of cavitation in the mixing chamber, it is expected to be minimal. The invention is believed to provide superior mixing of gas and molten metal and pumping efficiency compared to the gas injection pump system where gas is injected at the discharge of the base. Thus, the invention may provide economic and performance advantages compared to gas injection pumps that are currently on the market.
A second embodiment of the invention features a gas dispersement pump for dispersing gas that is introduced into the molten metal. While not wanting to be bound by theory, a gas stream is dispersed into bubbles of gas in the molten metal that enter an impeller chamber of the base. This embodiment of the invention employs an impeller, one or more volute or nonvolute impeller chambers and base inlet and outlet as described above.
A gas conduit extends from a gas source and has an outlet located at the inlet protector for directing gas into the impeller chamber. Alternatively, the gas conduit may extend directly into the base. Near the outlet of the gas conduit is disposed a porous gas dispersement member composed of porous graphite, sintered silicon carbide or other suitable porous refractory material adapted to disperse gas from the gas conduit. The dispersement of the gas reduces or eliminates cavitation in the impeller chamber.
Molten metal pumps are known that include a shaft sleeve at the inlet to the base of the pump. The shaft sleeve can be supported on a shoulder formed in the base and can be used to support bearing rings that can contact the shaft, impeller or bearings thereon. Also known is an inlet protector as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,533,535 by the inventor, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The inlet protector can be a sleeve that includes a plurality of openings that permit passage of molten metal and small articles into the base and prevent passage of other articles that are larger than the openings. The inlet sleeve differs from prior porous filters located at the inlet of the base in that porous inlet filters have high surface area and may tend to clog excessively. The gas dispersement member of the present invention is disposed near the outlet of the gas conduit. The inlet protector sleeve is configured to enable fastening and removal of the conduit or gas dispersement member to it. Dispersed gas (e.g., gas bubbles) are introduced from the inlet sleeve into the base inlet as described above.
Many variations are possible within the scope of the present invention. For example, the gas dispersement member may be attached to an end of the gas conduit or to the inlet protector. The gas dispersement member can have various configurations including a ring or circular disk. The entire inlet protector, or a portion thereof, may be formed of porous refractory material and function as the gas dispersement member. Rather than fastening to the inlet protector, the gas conduit may extend directly into the base in communication with a gas passageway formed in the base and leading to the impeller chamber. In this aspect, the gas dispersement member can be a disk connected to the end of the gas conduit.
The gas dispersement member of the present invention is usable in connection with a pump base that includes one or more impeller chambers. For example, the gas dispersement member and gas conduit may be fastened to a pump base that includes the gas mixing and molten metal pumping impeller chambers described in the first embodiment.
Various gases are suitably mixed or dispersed into the molten metal according to the present invention, including inert gases, reactive gases or combinations thereof. Inert gases include argon and nitrogen. A suitable reactive gas is chlorine gas. In addition, gases in which solid particles are entrained may also be suitable for use in the present invention. Suitable molten metal includes, for example, aluminum alloys. In a preferred form of the invention, scrap aluminum alloy containing a relatively high concentration of magnesium, for example from aluminum can scrap, can be melted to form the molten metal. By injecting chlorine gas into the molten metal, the magnesium may be removed as a magnesium chloride compound. Nitrogen gas may remove aluminum oxides from the molten metal. Silicon can be added to the molten metal, to make die cast parts used in the automotive industry.
The present invention offers numerous advantages. Molten metal can be pumped more efficiently leading to more economical production of metal articles. More efficient mixing of the gas and the molten metal may reduce the cost of production by using less gas. The invention also may reduce liberation of toxic chlorine gas, providing a safer work environment.
Referring now to the drawings,
A gas passageway 38 extends from a gas source 40 to near the mixing chamber. The gas passageway includes a base passageway 42 extending from a gas inlet opening 44 located at the exterior surface 45 of the base and a gas outlet 46 located in an interior of the base near the mixing chamber, and a gas conduit 48 extending from the gas source into fluid communication with the gas inlet. The gas conduit 48 may be a lance, flux tube or other suitable structure known in the art that can be used to direct gas, formed of a suitable refractory material (e.g., graphite). The base passageway 42 includes a vertical passage 42a extending from the base exterior and a horizontal passage 42b extending from the vertical passage to the mixing chamber. The horizontal passage outside of the intersection with the vertical passage is plugged after drilling. Gas travels from the gas source 40 along the gas conduit 48, through the base passageway 42 and into the mixing chamber 14. The gas may be any suitable reactive or inert gas including nitrogen, argon, chlorine and combinations of gases. The gas can also include entrained solid material.
The pump includes a motor mount 50 as known in the art for supporting the motor. Upper ends of posts 52 are clamped by clamps 54 to the motor mount. Lower ends of the posts are cemented into bores of the base in a known manner. An upper end portion of the gas conduit is clamped by clamp 56 to the motor mount.
Upper and lower impeller members 30, 28, respectively, are adapted to be rotated in the pumping 16 and mixing chambers 14, respectively. The impeller members may be perforated dual intake, vaned or barrel impellers of the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,881,030, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. A suitable dual intake baffle impeller is disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/650,499, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The upper impeller member 30 includes inlet openings 62 (
More specifically, upon rotation of the lower impeller member 28 in the mixing chamber 14, the gas and molten metal are efficiently mixed and a mixture of the gas and molten metal travels out the lower discharge passageway 32a. Although cavitation may occur in the mixing chamber it is generally absent in the pumping chamber. While not wanting to be bound by theory, rotation of the impeller in the pumping chamber counterbalances forces of cavitation in the mixing chamber. Thus, while efficient mixing of gas and molten metal occurs, via cavitation or without cavitation in the mixing chamber, the balanced rotation of the pumping impeller lessens detrimental effects of cavitation or unbalancing of the impeller member in the mixing chamber.
While not wanting to be bound by theory, gas bubbles 86 from a lower discharge stream 84 composed of the mixture of gas 86 and molten metal 88 tends to rise into the upper stream 90 of molten metal 92, which further mixes the gas and molten metal.
The impeller is constructed and arranged so as to simultaneously rotate in both impeller chambers. Alternatively, the impeller may be positioned by vertical movement of the shaft so as to rotate in the mixing chamber only, in the pumping chamber only, in a transfer chamber only or in two impeller chambers simultaneously as disclosed in U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/696,665 and 60/659,356, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties. The impeller can be rotated only in the mixing chamber, and not in any other chamber, when little or no cavitation results from introducing gas into the mixing chamber.
Referring to
A gas source 128 is disposed outside the molten metal and may be fastened to a support plate or motor mount as shown in
It will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art in view of this disclosure that the gas dispersement member may be formed in various geometric shapes, of various materials and positioned in different locations in the inventive pump, while being effective to disperse gas. The gas dispersement member may be square, circular, cylindrical, annular or other shape. The material of the gas dispersement member is any refractory material that disperses a stream of gas (e.g., into small bubbles), including porous graphite or sintered silicon carbide. One suitable material is porous sintered silicon carbide material of which the inlet filters used on Pyrotek or Metaullics pumps are composed. Moreover, while the gas dispersement member is shown used in a base having a single impeller chamber (
In another aspect of the invention shown in
Another aspect of the invention effectively combines features of the first and second embodiments resulting in a pump that disperses gas, mixes gas/molten metal and pumps molten metal (
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