This technology includes furnaces for melting metal to form alloys.
Alloys can be formed by casting mixtures of molten metals. When the metals are being melted in a furnace, it may be desirable to inhibit the formation of oxides and nitrides in the molten metal by shielding it from the atmosphere in the furnace. This is typically accomplished by injecting inert gas into the furnace to purge the furnace of air.
A furnace has a melting chamber with a periphery defined by a surrounding wall structure. The furnace is provided with a purge system configured to direct inert gas to flow downward in the melting chamber in the configuration of a curtain that adjoins the wall structure and reaches only partially around the periphery of the melting chamber.
In operation, the melting chamber is provided with an atmosphere including air. Inert gas is directed to flow downward in the melting chamber in the configuration of a curtain that adjoins the wall structure and reaches only partially around the periphery of the melting chamber. The inert gas forms an upper surface by flowing horizontally from a lower end of the curtain, and increases in depth such that the upper surface rises in the melting chamber to displace the air from the melting chamber.
The structures shown in the drawings includes examples of the elements recited in the apparatus claims, and can be operated in steps as recited in the method claims. These examples are described to provide enablement and best mode without imposing limitations that are not recited in the claims.
As shown schematically in
The combustion chamber 17 is sealed from gas flow communication with the melting chamber 15. This shields the molten metal from the products of combustion that are generated in the combustion chamber 17. The sealed condition is established in part by an internal furnace wall 40 that separates the melting chamber 15 from the combustion chamber 17.
In addition to separating the two chambers 15 and 17, the internal wall 40 functions as a radiant heating panel for transferring thermal energy from the combustion chamber 17 to the load in the melting chamber 15. The internal wall 40 thus has an upper surface 42 facing into the combustion chamber 17, and has a lower surface 44 facing into the melting chamber 15. The lower surface 44 functions as a radiant heating surface at the top of the melting chamber 15 to raise the melting chamber 15 to an elevated temperature in atmospheric isolation from the combustion chamber 17.
When a charge of metal is being melted, a surface 50 of the melt 52 forms and rises in the melting chamber 15. The surface 50 is thus exposed to the atmosphere within the chamber 15. That atmosphere is normally air, which can promote the formation of oxides and nitrides that weaken alloys formed from the melted metals. Alloys formed from melts of aluminum and lithium are especially susceptible to this weakening effect. Accordingly, the furnace 10 is equipped with an atmospheric purging system 70 to isolate the melt 52 from the air in the chamber 15.
The purging system 70 in the given example includes a diffuser 72 at the rear wall 28 of the furnace 10. The diffuser 72 has an array of passages 73. A source 74 of inert gas, which is preferably argon, communicates with the passages 73 through one or more lines 75 with valves 76.
The diffuser 72 is a refractory block 80 in the rear wall 28. As shown in greater detail in
A controller 100 operates the valves 76 to direct streams of argon from the source 74 to the passages 73 at the diffuser 72. The valves 76 provide the argon streams at a pressure that is greatly reduced from the tank storage pressure. Preferably, the reduced pressure exceeds the pressure of the melting chamber atmosphere only as needed for the argon streams to flow through the passages 73 and penetrate the chamber volume beside the downstream ports 91. The increasing flow areas of the passages 73 ensure that the argon streams emerge from the ports 91 at a low velocity. Additionally, the density of the argon is greater than the density of the melting chamber air, whereby the argon streams pour through the inclined passages 73 and then sink directly downward from the ports 91. This avoids entrainment of oxygen and nitrogen from the surrounding air into the argon streams.
With the ports 91 arranged closely in the horizontal row, the sinking argon streams merge into the configuration of a curtain 100 flowing slowly downward in the melting chamber 15. The curtain 100 adjoins a surface portion 104 of the rear wall 28 beneath the ports 91 as shown schematically in
Importantly, the curtain 100 reaches only partially around the periphery of the melting chamber. This limits the surface area of interface between the inert gas and the furnace atmosphere, which helps to minimize shear stresses that could cause turbulence and mixing of the inert gas and the furnace atmosphere at the interface. Preferably, the curtain 100 reaches around not more than one half of the periphery of the melting chamber, and more preferably reaches around not more than quarter of the periphery of the melting chamber.
This written description sets for the best mode of carrying out the invention, and describes the invention so as to enable a person of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention, by presenting examples of the elements and steps recited in the claims. The patentable scope of the invention is defined by the claims, and may include other examples that do not differ from the literal language of the claims, as well as equivalent examples with insubstantial differences from the literal language of the claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4770697 | Zurecki | Sep 1988 | A |
4989501 | Catan | Feb 1991 | A |
5195888 | Sharma et al. | Mar 1993 | A |
5518221 | Zurecki et al. | May 1996 | A |
5961689 | Kobayashi | Oct 1999 | A |
8191607 | Cho et al. | Jun 2012 | B2 |
20040060389 | Roth et al. | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20080182022 | La Sorda | Jul 2008 | A1 |
20110120852 | Kim | May 2011 | A1 |
20110268891 | MacNeil et al. | Nov 2011 | A1 |
20150367409 | Tilak et al. | Dec 2015 | A1 |
20190162473 | Clauss | May 2019 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Clear, Level eleven surface area to volume ratio (Year: 2013). |
Industrial Heating, Tips on good refractory practice for aluminum melting furnaces (Year: 2002). |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20220373261 A1 | Nov 2022 | US |