This invention relates to the casting of steel strip by a single or a twin roll caster. In a twin roll caster, molten metal is introduced between a pair of counter-rotated horizontally positioned casting rolls, which are internally cooled so that metal shells solidify on the moving roll surfaces and are brought together at the nip between them to produce a thin cast strip product delivered downwardly from the nip. The term “nip” between the casting rolls is used herein to refer to the general region at which the rolls are closest together. The molten metal may be poured from a ladle into a smaller vessel, from which it flows through a metal delivery nozzle located above the nip forming a casting pool of molten metal supported on the casting surfaces of the rolls. This casting pool is usually confined between side plates or dams held in sliding engagement with end surfaces of the rolls so as to dam the two ends of the casting pool against outflow.
When casting steel strip in a twin roll caster, the casting pool will generally be at a temperature in excess of 1550° C., and usually 1600° C. and greater. It is necessary to achieve very rapid cooling of the molten steel over the casting surfaces of the rolls in order to form solidified shells in the short period of exposure on the casting surfaces to the molten steel casting pool during each revolution of the casting rolls. Moreover, it is important to achieve even solidification so as to avoid distortion of the solidifying shells which come together at the nip to form the steel strip. Distortion of the shells can lead to surface defects known as “crocodile skin surface roughness.” Crocodile skin surface roughness is known to occur with high carbon levels above 0.065%, and even with carbon levels below 0.065% by weight carbon. Crocodile skin roughness, as illustrated in
We have found that with carbon levels below 0.065% by weight the formation of crocodile skin surface roughness is directly related to the heat flux between the molten metal and the surface of the casting rolls, and that the formation of crocodile skin roughness can be controlled by controlling the heat flux between the molten metal and the surface of the casting rolls.
This relationship between the heat flux from the molten metal and the surface of the casting rolls and the formation of crocodile skin surface roughness on the thin cast strip has been found to occur whether the casting roll surfaces are smooth or textured.
The energy of the rotating brush against the casting roll may be in turn controlled based on the casting speed by varying the application pressure or the speed of rotation, or both, of an electric, pneumatic or hydraulic motor rotating the brush against the casting surface. The energy of the rotating brush can be measured by measuring the torque of the motor rotating. The heat flux between the molten metal and the casting surfaces of the casting rolls may be initially measured and continually measured, as well as the difference between the real time heat flux and the initial heat flux measured, by measuring the difference in temperature of the cooling water circulated through the casting roll between the inlet and outlet as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,588,493 and 6,755,234. Although this is the best way presently contemplated for measuring the heat flux, the heat flux can be measured by any available method. In any event, by monitoring the heat flux and calculating the difference in heat flux from the initial heat flux measured, the energy exerted by the brush against the casting surface can be automatically controlled by a control system that receives electrical signals from the monitor corresponding to the measured heat flux, and controls the energy exerted by the brush against the casting roll based in the difference in heat flux from the initial heat flux measured.
It was previously proposed to project gas in the casting area adjacent the casting surface to adjust the shape of the crown of the casting rolls. See U.S. Pat. No. 5,787,967. However, it has not been proposed project gas on the casting surfaces of the casting rolls in the vicinity of where brushes remove oxides from the casting surfaces to improve localized heat flux between the molten metal and the casting roll surface in the casting area. The casting area is the area between the casting rolls above the nip where the casting pool is formed. It is the area from the twelve o'clock position on the casting rolls where the seal is formed, typically with gas curtains, as the rotating casting roll surface enter the casting area, and does not include the area adjacent the casting rolls between the discharge of cast strip from the nip and the twelve o'clock position on the casting rolls.
We have delivered gas to the casting surface of the casting rolls to create a gas layer adjacent the casting surface immediately following brushing of oxides from the casting surface. A method of localized control of heat flux in continuous casting of thin cast strip is disclosed that comprises the steps of:
The steps of removing oxides from the casting surface of each casting roll and delivering gas on the casting surface of each casting roll may occur simultaneously in the nip between the rotating brush and the casting surface of the casting roll. The gas also, or in the alternative, may be introduced upstream of the rotating brush adjacent the brush. In addition, the step of forming a gas layer may comprise introducing the gas into a housing provided about the rotating brush. Alternatively, the step of forming the gas layer on the casting surface of each casting roll to replace the removed oxides may comprise flooding with a gas the casting surface adjacent rotating brush before entry to the casting area.
The gas may comprise at least one gas selected from the group consisting of nitrogen, argon, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, water vapor, dry air, helium or a mixture of two or more thereof.
The casting surfaces of the casting rolls may be textured with a random distribution of discrete projections. Portions of the projections may or may not extend above the gas layer.
Alternatively, a method of localized control of heat flux in continuous casting of thin cast strip is disclosed comprising the steps of:
The gas projected in the respective zones may be different in composition, mixture, pressure, or at least two thereof the delivering of the gas on the casting surface. Further, the gas may be projected in at least five zones extending along the casting surfaces of the casting rolls. In any event, the delivering of the gas on the casting surface of each casting roll may be adjacent the nip formed between the rotating cleaning brush and the casting surface of the casting roll. The delivering of the gas to form a gas layer may comprise introducing the gas into a housing provided about the rotating brush. Also, the step of delivering gas to the casting surface of each casting roll to replace the removed oxides may comprise flooding the casting surfaces adjacent the rotating brushes with a gas.
The casting surfaces of the casting rolls are textured with a random distribution of discrete projections. Again, portions of the projections may or may not extend above the gas layer.
The gas nozzles may be capable of delivering in the respective zones different gas compositions, gas mixtures, pressures, or at least two thereof. Again, the gas may comprise at least one gas selected from the group consisting of nitrogen, argon, hydrogen, helium, water vapor, dry air, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide or a mixture of two or more thereof
Further, an apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip is disclosed that comprises:
The apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip claimed may have the gas nozzles capable of delivering gas adjacent the rotating brush, and flooding the casting surface of each casting roll adjacent the brush with gas. In addition, a housing may be provided about each rotating brush that also supports at least some of the gas nozzles.
Alternatively, an apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip is disclosed that comprises:
The apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip may have the gas nozzles capable of directing gas on the surface of the casting rolls to flood the area adjacent the position of the brushes before the casting area.
Alternatively, an apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip with localized heat flux control is disclosed comprising:
The gas nozzles may be capable of delivering in the respective zones different gas compositions, gas mixtures, pressures, or at least two thereof. The gas nozzles may be capable of delivering of the gas on the casting surface in at least five zones along the casting surface of the casting roll. Also, the gas nozzles may be capable of delivering of the gas on the casting surface of each casting roll adjacent the nip formed between the rotating cleaning brush and the casting surface of the casting roll. Further, the gas nozzles may be capable flooding the casting surfaces adjacent the rotating brushes with a gas. In addition, a housing may be provided about the rotating brush, and the gas nozzle may capable of delivering the gas to form a gas layer through the housing.
Again, the casting surfaces of the casting rolls may be textured with a random distribution of discrete projections.
The gas may comprise at least one gas selected for the group consisting of: nitrogen, argon, hydrogen, helium, water vapor, dry air, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide or a mixture of two or more thereof
The apparatus for continuously casting thin cast strip claimed may have in addition a control system that comprises:
The monitoring device may be capable of monitoring the torque of the hydraulic motors by measuring the pressure differential between inlet and outlet of hydraulic fluid through the hydraulic motors. Alternatively, the monitoring device may be capable of measuring the torque between the hydraulic motor and a chock or a motor mount.
In order that the invention may be more fully explained, particular embodiments will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The embodiments are described with reference to a twin roll caster in
Casting rolls 12 are water cooled so that shells solidify on the casting surfaces 12A as the casting surfaces move in contact with the casting pool 10. The casting surfaces may textured, for example, with a random distribution of discrete projections as described and claimed in application Ser. No. 10/077,391, filed Feb. 15, 2002 and published Sep. 12, 2002, as US 2002-0124990. The shells are brought together at the nip 17 between the casting rolls to produce a solidified thin cast strip product 19 at the nip. This thin cast product may be fed, typically with further processing, to a standard coiler (not shown).
The illustrated twin roll caster as thus far described is of the kind which is illustrated and described in some detail in our Australian Patent 631728 and our U.S. Pat. No. 5,184,668 and reference may be made to those patents for appropriate constructional details which form no part of the present invention.
A pair of roll brushes denoted generally as 21 is disposed adjacent the pair of casting rolls such that they may be brought into contact with the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12 at opposite sides of nip 17 prior to the casting surfaces of the casting rolls prior coming into contact with the molten metal casting pool 10.
Each brush apparatus 21 comprises a brush frame 20 which carries a main cleaning brush 22, for cleaning the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12 during the casting campaign, and optionally, a separate sweeper brush 23 cleaning the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12 at the beginning and end of the casting campaign. The main cleaning brush may be segmented if desired, but is generally one brush extended across the casting roll surface 12A of each casting roll 12. Frame 20 may comprise a base plate 41 and upstanding side plates 42 on which the main cleaning brush 22 is mounted. Base plate 41 may be fitted with slides 43 which are slidable along a track member 44 to allow the frame 20 to be moved toward and away from one of the casting rolls 12, and thereby move the main brush 22 mounted on the frame 20 by operation of the main brush actuator 28. A sweeper brush 23, if present, may be mounted on frame 20 to move independently of the main brush 22 by operation of sweeper brush actuator 28A from retracted positions to operative positions in contact with the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12, so that either the sweeper brush 23 or the main brush 22, or both, may be brushing the casting surfaces of the casting rolls without interruption in the brushing operation between them.
What is important is that the energy exerted by the cleaning brush 22 against the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12 is controlled so that the cleaning of the casting roll surfaces is maintained at a specified level during the casting campaign, and in turn formation of crocodile skin roughness on the thin cast strip is controlled. The energy exerted by the brush on the casting surface 12A is controlled by controlling the pressure of the brush on the casting rolls, or the rotational speed of the cleaning brush 22, or both, based on measurement of the heat flux from the molten metal in the casting pool 10 to the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12. This pressure and rotational speed will be varied according to the casting speed during the casting campaign. This control may be done manually or automatically as described in the invention.
The method may be practiced by controlling the energy exerted by the rotating brush to maintain the casting surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12 clean, as above described, during the casting campaign. This may be done by cleaning to expose a majority of the projections of the casting surfaces of the casting rolls 12, and measuring this initial heat flux between the molten metal and the casting rolls. The heat flux is then continually measured in real time either continuously or intermittently during the casting campaign, and then the difference between the real time heat flux and the initial heat flux measured, to control the energy exerted by the cleaning brush 22 on the casting roll surfaces 12A of the casting rolls 12. The heat flux, both initially and in real time, can be measured by measuring the difference in temperature of the cooling water circulated through the casting rolls between the inlet and outlet as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,588,493 and 6,755,234. Although this is the best way presently contemplated for measuring the heat, the heat flux can be measured by any available method.
The initial measured heat flux is related to the desired degree of cleaning of the casting roll surfaces 12A, as above described, to control the formation of crocodile skin roughness during the casting campaign. The continual measured heat flux in real time, and the difference between the initial heat flux and the real time heat flux measured, is used to control the energy exerted by the cleaning brush on the casting surfaces 12A so that cleaning of the casting roll surfaces 12A is controlled, and in turn, the formation of crocodile skin roughness on the surface of the cast strip controlled.
The method can thus be automated by providing a control system (not shown) responsive to sensors monitoring the heat flux, calculating the difference in heat flux from the initial heat flux measured, and controlling the energy exerted by the brush against the casting surface based in the difference in heat flux from the initially heat flux measured. The cleaning brush 22, the main cleaning brush, may be in the form of a cylindrical barrel brush having a central body 45 carried on a shaft 34 and fitted with a cylindrical canopy of wire bristles 46. Shaft 34 may be rotatably mounted in bearings 47 in the side plates 42 of frame 20, and a hydraulic, pneumatic, or electric drive motor may be mounted on one of these side plates coupled to the brush shaft 34 so as to rotatably drive the cleaning brush 22 in the opposite direction of the rotation of the casting surfaces 12A of casting roll 12. Although the main brush 22 is shown as a cylindrical barrel brush, it should be understood that this brush may take other forms such as the elongate rectangular brush disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,307,861, the rotary brushing devices disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,575,327 or the pivoting brushes of Australian Patent Application PO7602. The precise form of the main brush is not important to the present invention. What is important is that the energy exerted by the cleaning brush against the casting surfaces capable of being controlled so the cleaning of exposed casting surface of the casting rolls is controlled throughout the casting campaign and, in turn, formation of crocodile skin surface roughness of the cast strip is controlled. The energy exerted by cleaning brush 22 against the casting surface 12A of the casting roll 12 may be controlled by controlling the application pressure or the speed of rotation, or both, of an electric, pneumatic or hydraulic motor rotating the brush coordinated with the casting speed.
The energy, pressure or rotation speed of the rotating brush can be measured by measuring the torque of the motor rotating. The rotational speed of the cleaning brush 22 can be measured, for example, by a flow meter measuring the flow of hydraulic fluid through a hydraulic motor driving the rotating cleaning brush 22. The torque of the motor may be monitored by measuring the pressure differential between inlet and outlet of hydraulic fluid through a hydraulic motor. Alternatively, the torque of the motor may be monitored by measuring the torque with a strain gauge, load cell or other device between the motor and mount for bearings 47 (i.e., chock) or other convenient part of the motor mount structure.
Although the main cleaning brush 22 may be driven in a direction counter to the rotation of the casting roll, the main brush 22 is usually driven in the same rotational direction as the casting rolls, as indicated by the arrow 36 in
If used, the separate sweeper brush 23, which is peripherally involved in use of the best mode of the invention contemplated, may be in a form of a cylindrical barrel brush which is mounted on frame 20 so as to be moveable on the frame such that it can be brought into engagement with the casting surfaces 12A of casting roll 12, or retracted away from that the casting surface by operation of the sweeper brush actuator 28A independent of whether the main brush is engaged with the casting surfaces of casting roll. This enables the sweeper brush 23 to be moved independently of the main brush 22 and brought into operation only during the start and finish of a casting run and be withdrawn during normal casting as described below. The sweeper brush 23 may be rotatably driven in tandem with or independently of the main brush 22. The sweeper brush 23 may also be driven in the same direction as the casting surfaces 12A of casting rolls 12 at a speed different from the speed of the casting rolls 12. In this way, the large accretions that can occur at the start and end of the casting run are less likely to be dragged across the casting surfaces 12A and cause scoring of the casting surface 12A, where the sweeper brush 23 is contacting the casting surfaces 12A moving in the direction counter to movement of the casting surface.
If used, sweeper brush 23 may have a central body 24 carried on a shaft 25 and fitted with a cylindrical canopy of wire bristles 26. The brush shaft 25 may be rotatably mounted in a brush mounting structure 27 which can be moved back and forth by operation of quick acting hydraulic cylinders 28 to move the brush 23 inwardly against the casting roll 12 or to retract it away from the casting roll. The roll mounting structure 27 may be in the form of a wide yoke with side wings 30 in which the brush shaft 25 is rotatably mounted in bearings 31. The brush 23, brush mounting structure 27 and actuator 28 may be carried on the main frame 20 of the brushing apparatus 21 so that the sweeper brush 23 will always be correctly positioned in advance of the cleaning main brush 22. The roll mounting structure 27 may also carry an elongate scraper blade 29 which extends throughout the width of the barrel brush 23 and projects into the canopy of bristles 26. Blade 29 may be made of hardened steel and have a sharp leading edge.
Sweeper brush 23 may be rotated purely by frictional engagement between its canopy of bristles 26 with the casting roll 12, in which case it may be simply rotatably mounted between the side plates 42 of frame 20 without any drive to drive rotation as shown in
With the arrangement shown in
Sweeper brush 23 is moved into contact with the casting surfaces 12A of the casting roll 12 prior to the start of casting and is moved away from the casting surfaces after casting conditions have stabilized. It is moved back into engagement with the casting surfaces just prior to termination of the cast. The point at which the casting conditions stabilize, and sweeper brush 23 disengaged from the casting surfaces, is usually about when the set point is reached for the level of the pool 10 of molten metal, and the point at which the sweeper brush 23 reengage is usually about when the set point level of the pool 10 is about to drop as the end of the casting run approaches. The sweeper brush 23 serves to prevent damage to the main brush 22 and the casting surface 12A of casting roll 12 due to carry over of debris generated on commencement and near termination of the casting run.
If clean bands are to be used in practicing the present method, before the casting campaign, each of casting rolls 12 are prepared with a clean band (not shown) before casting preferably at each end of the casting roll. This may be done by providing a chalk mark or soap stone mark on the casting surface 12A of the casting roll by rotating the casting rolls to make the mark along the circumferential surface. This chalk or soap stone mark may be positioned at each end of the casting roll 12 to ensure that the cold machine roll crown is not affected by creation of clean bands on the casting roll. Preferably a clean band is positioned about 8 inches from each end of the casting roll and each band is about 15 millimeters in width. After the chalk or soap stone marks are formed on the casting roll surfaces, the cleaning brush 22 are applied to the casting surface 12A of the casting roll as it is rotated to create the clean bands. The clean bands are characterized by a large central “clean area” with a feathered appearance toward the outside where the brush contact with the casting roll surfaces becomes reduced. A clean band is the clean area formed by the contact of the brush 22 with the casting surface 12A, not including the feathered portions. During the subsequent casting campaign, the clean band(s) provide the reference for the energy to be exerted by the main brush 22 against the casting roll surfaces 12 to keep the casting roll surfaces clean in accordance with the present invention. This alternative is particularly used where the energy of the rotating brush exerted against the casting rolls during the casting campaign is controlled by an operator observing the casting surfaces of the casting rolls.
To illustrate the cleaning done in accordance with the present invention, micrographs of textured casting roll surfaces 12A are shown in
We have also found that the cleaning efficiency requires maintaining a relationship between the rotational speed of the cleaning brush of the sweeper brush and the casting speed with the caster.
Turning to
In any case, the gas delivered in the respective zones may be different and varied in composition, mixture, pressure, or at least two thereof, by delivering of the gas on the casting surface by manual or automated control of the valves 122A, 122B, 122C, 122D and 122E. The plurality of gas valves are provided to control the delivery rate of the gas on the casting surface 12A of the casting rolls 12, and to control the mixing ratio when more than one gas is being delivered. The valves 122A, 122B, 122C, 122D and 122E may be either manually controlled or automatically controlled with a computer system (not shown). This embodiment is particularly of utility, for example, in providing a different gas mixture, pressure or composition adjacent the ends of the casting rolls because of the difference in heat gradient adjacent the ends of the casting rolls, compared to the central area of casting surface 12A of the casting roll 12. In addition, the composition, mixture, or pressure of the gas delivered through valves 122A, 122B, 122C, 122D and 122E to one or more of the zones along the casting surface 12A of the casting roll 12 may be varied in similar manner during the casting campaign to enable the heat flux from the molten melt to the casting rolls to be controlled for desired results.
In any case, one or more gases selected from the group consisting of nitrogen, argon, helium, hydrogen, water vapor, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, dry air, or mixtures thereof, may be used for these purposes
The gas header 110 may be provided to deliver gas in the nip between the brush 22 and the casting surface 12A of the casting roll 12 as shown in
It should be noted that five zones are illustrated in
Referring to
Although the invention has been illustrated and described in detail in the foregoing drawings and description with reference to several embodiments, it should be understood that the description is illustrative and not restrictive in character, and that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. Rather, the present invention covers all variations, modifications and equivalent structures that come within the scope and spirit of the invention. Additional features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the detailed description, which exemplifies the best mode of carrying out the invention as presently perceived. Many modifications may be made to the present invention as described above without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 11/010,625, filed Dec. 13, 2004, now abandoned.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11010625 | Dec 2004 | US |
Child | 11302485 | US |