The present invention relates to apparatus for, and method of, electric induction heating large billets through the cross section of the billet to a tapered heating profile along the axial length of the billet prior to a process of extruding or forging the billet into an article of manufacture.
A preheated billet is used in an extrusion process where the preheated billet is forced through a die to obtain an article of manufacture. Similarly in a forging process a preheated billet can be forged into an article of manufacture. An extrusion or a forging process is referred to herein as a hot working process.
Pre-heating large billets for a hot working process requires sufficient heating throughout the cross sectional mass of the large billet to the center of the billet along the axial length of the billet for satisfactorily use in a hot working process.
One prior art method for creating a tapered axial temperature profile is to heat the entire billet and then spray water on it to cool it back down to give a tapered temperature profile. This method is referred to as taper quenching and is described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,325,694 A. The tapered quenching process disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,325,694 A results in wasted energy. In extrusion processes the leading (hot) end of the billet that is inserted into the extrusion apparatus has a higher cross sectional temperature than at the opposing trailing (cooler) end of the billet to allow the heat of friction to heat the trailing end and to keep the extrusion die at a constant temperature. For example a large aluminum billet could require a pre-extrusion cross sectional temperature at the trailing end of 350° C. and a pre-extrusion cross sectional temperature at the leading end of 500° C. The hot end of the billet goes into the extrusion die first and the cold end trails so that the heat of friction from extruding through the die will keep the temperature at the die around 500° C. for an aluminum billet.
Another prior art method of creating a less than linear tapered axial temperature profile for a hot working process is to statically heat a large billet within multiple solenoidal induction coils with each coil connected to a separate power supply along the axial length Ax of the large billet to achieve a stepped billet cross sectional temperature difference of ΔT between coils as shown in
In the field of electric induction heat treatment, scan induction heat treatment of workpieces as disclosed, for example, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,291,817 B2, is performed with workpieces having a high ratio of axial length to cross sectional diameters along the axial length of the workpiece, such as a camshaft, to surface (case) harden the workpiece and not to heat throughout the cross sectional mass of a workpiece to its center.
It is one object of the present invention to reduce or eliminate the temperature differences along the length of a large billet resulting from the multi-coil induction heating process described above and achieve a smooth linear (tapered) temperature profile throughout the cross sectional mass along the axial length of a large billet for a hot working process.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of electric induction heating of a large billet through its entire cross section and axial length prior to entering an extruding or forging apparatus by passing (moving) the large billet through a single induction coil at a variable speed while varying the induced power applied to the single induction coil and supplied by a single power supply, if necessary, to achieve a particular cross sectional heating profile in the large billet.
These and other objects of the invention are set forth in this specification.
In one aspect the present invention is a process and apparatus for electric induction heating of large billets to a tapered cross sectional heating profile along the axial lengths of the billets by inductively scan heating along the axial circumferential length of the large billet with a single induction coil prior to hot working the large billet in an extrusion or forging process is provided.
In another aspect the present invention is an apparatus for and method of electric induction heating of a large billet through its entire cross section along its axial length prior to entering an extruding or forging apparatus by passing the large billet through a single induction coil connected to a single power supply with variation of the speed of the large billet moving through the single induction coil and, if necessary, variation in the induced power applied to the large billet moving through the single induction coil as required to result in a desired cross sectional temperature profile along the axial length of the large billet. Optionally a flux extender can be provided at the leading end of the large billet as the billet passes through the single induction coil.
The above and other aspects of the invention are set forth in this specification and the appended claims.
The appended drawings, as briefly summarized below, are provided for exemplary understanding of the invention, and do not limit the invention as further set forth herein.
There is shown in the figures one embodiment of a method of electric induction heating a large billet to a tapered cross sectional heating profile along its axial length Ax prior to immediately hot working the billet in an extrusion or forging process. The term “large billet” is used herein to describe billets with a cross sectional dimension (usually a cross sectional diameter) of at least 3.5 inches and where the ratio of the billet's cross sectional dimension to length is at most 3:5.
In
In some embodiments of the invention the zero-friction billet handling assembly includes billet rotational apparatus for rotating the billet during at least a portion of the induction heating process of the present invention to promote circumferential temperature uniformity.
In some embodiments of the invention flux extender 16 can be provided at a fixed or a variable position from the axial leading end 90a (identified in
Large billet induction heating coil 14 comprises a single multi-turn solenoidal coil that is connected at its opposing ends to a single phase alternating current power source 22 that is mounted on platform 20 above the large billet induction heating coil in some embodiments of the invention.
In some embodiments of the invention one or more radial billet thermocouples (TC), such as 92a, 92b and 92c in
Zero-friction billet handling assembly 12 moves loaded large billet 90 into and through heating coil 14 at a processor controlled variable speed to achieve the required cross sectional heating temperature profile along the axial length of the large billet as shown for example in
Optionally in addition to variable speed scan induction heating of the billet, induced power density changes can be made by changing the output power magnitude of power source 22 during the scan induction heating process to achieve the required cross sectional temperature profile in some embodiments of the invention.
In other embodiments of the invention the heating coil alone can be moved at a controlled variable speed along the axial length of a stationary billet loaded on the zero-friction billet handling system, or both the zero-friction billet handling assembly with the billet loaded on it and heating coil can be moved at variable speeds relative to each other.
In
In some embodiments of the invention in addition to variable billet speed control and, if necessary power level control during the billet scan induction heating process, independent movement of flux extender 16 in the X-direction (coincident with the axial length Ax of the large billet) may also be used to control the level of cross sectional temperature heating of the large billet during an induction heating process of the present invention.
In some embodiments of the invention multiple cycles of large billet movement through the heating coil (that is, consecutively in the +X and −X directions) may be used to achieve thorough cross sectional heating by a combination of interior cross sectional heat “soaking” and additional eddy current surface heating with each induction heating scan cycle in either the +X or −X directions. One cycle is defined as movement of the large billet in one direction (either +X or −X) through the heating coil. Each cycle need not be a complete passage of the entire axial length of the large billet through the heating coil in one direction as shown in
One or more large billet surface scanning pyrometers (PM) for example 94a, 94b and 94c at the entry end and 94a′, 94b′ and 94c′ at the exit end can be provided at heating coil 14 entry end 14a and exit end 14b to verify billet surface temperatures along the axial length of the billet as the billet passes these locations. For example entry axial surface scanning pyrometers 94a, 94b and 94c may be used as input to large billet heating process controller 62 to determine a surface temperature profile prior to starting a large billet taper cross sectional heating process of the present invention and exit axial surface scanning pyrometers 94a′, 94b′ and 94c′ may be used as input to controller 62 after completion of the large billet taper cross sectional heating process to verify that the required heating was achieved and optionally for large billet heating process controller 62 to store the temperature values in an electronic memory device for future reference or input to a large billet heating profile process computer program.
In some embodiments of the invention the large billet can be optionally preheated to a nominal cross sectional heating profile in an oven or other heating apparatus prior to moving the large billet into the billet induction heating. In these embodiments entry axial surface scanning pyrometers 94a, 94b and 94c may be used as input to large billet heating process controller 62 to determine a surface temperature profile of the preheated billet prior to starting a large billet taper cross sectional heating process of the present invention.
In the embodiments on the invention where multiple cycles of large billet movement through the heating coil the entry and/or exit axial surface scanning pyrometers measured temperatures inputted to large billet heating process controller 62 can be used to adjust the process parameters (variable speed; variable power level (if used); or positioning of the flux extender (if used)) during each one of the successive multiple cycles.
In some embodiments of the invention, as shown in
As disclosed herein the preferred billet cross sectional heating profile is a linear (tapered) temperature drop tapering linearly from the leading end temperature to the trailing end temperature of the large billet as shown for the example in
The tapered cross sectional heating profile of the billet illustrated by the linear curve from T1 to T2 cross sectional temperatures through the axial length of the large billet (from the billet's trailing to the leading end) in
In some embodiments of the invention large billet heating process controller 62 receives input signals from optional radial billet thermocouples 92a, 92b and 92c to modify execution of the cross sectional heating profile program executed by the controller.
Large billet heating process controller 62 provides a billet movement output signal to zero-friction billet handling assembly 12 to control the variable speed (accelerations/decelerations) at which the zero-friction billet handling assembly moves the large billet though the heating coil 14 and an optional billet rotation output signal for rotation of the billet if used in a particular application.
If in a particular application heating coil 14 optionally moves along the axial length of the billet the controller also outputs signals to the heating coil to control movement of the heating coil.
If in a particular application flux extender 16 is used, controller 62 also outputs a flux extender movement output signal to the flux extender's transport apparatus to control a fixed or varying separation distance between the leading end of the billet and the facing end of the flux extender as the billet moves through the heating coil during an induction scan heating process of the present invention.
In some embodiments of the invention human machine interface devices such as display screen 58 and keyboard/mouse 56 are provided for the large billet heating system operator to communicate with large billet heating process controller 62.
In other examples of the invention non-linear cross sectional temperature profiles can be achieved with the large billet heating process controller 62 executing a large billet non-linear cross sectional temperature heating profile process computer program.
While large billet entry into the heating coil is described with the leading end of the billet followed by the trailing end with the leading end being heated to the highest temperature this is not limiting to practice of the present invention.
In the description above, for the purposes of explanation, numerous specific requirements and several specific details have been set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the example and embodiments. It will be apparent however, to one skilled in the art, that one or more other examples or embodiments may be practiced without some of these specific details. The particular embodiments described are not provided to limit the invention but to illustrate it.
Reference throughout this specification to “one example or embodiment,” “an example or embodiment,” “one or more examples or embodiments,” or “different example or embodiments,” for example, means that a particular feature may be included in the practice of the invention. In the description various features are sometimes grouped together in a single example, embodiment, figure, or description thereof for the purpose of streamlining the disclosure and aiding in the understanding of various inventive aspects.
The present invention has been described in terms of preferred examples and embodiments. Equivalents, alternatives and modifications, aside from those expressly stated, are possible and within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/232,857, filed Sep. 25, 2015, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62232857 | Sep 2015 | US |