The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing a component having at least one internal cavity according to the preamble of claim 1.
Hot isostatic pressing of metallic or ceramic powders, so called HIP or HIPPING is a commonly used manufacturing process for various components. In the HIP manufacturing process a capsule which defines the shape of the article is filled with a metal or ceramic powder of desired composition. The capsule is evacuated, sealed and thereafter subjected to increased temperature and pressure whereby the powder is densified into a compact body.
Some components comprise internal cavities, for example cooling channels. However, it is difficult to achieve components having curved internal channels with conventional methods such as milling or boring in metallic work pieces.
The documents WO2005/049251 and DE4426544 describe HIP methods for manufacture of components having internal channels. The internal channels are formed from pre-forms that are arranged within a mould that defines the shape of the article. The mould is filled with metallic powder and is heated under isostatic pressure whereby the metallic powder densifies to a compact article. The pre-forms are thereafter removed whereby an internal cavity remains in the article. It is also known to use preformed tubes to form the internal cavities in the component. The tubes remain in the compacted article after the heating and compacting step.
A problem with the above mentioned methods is that it is difficult to achieve high accuracy of the position of the internal cavities in the final component. This is mainly due to that the embedded channel forming pre-form moves when the powder is heated and subjected to high isostatic pressure during manufacture of the component.
Thus, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved method for manufacture a component having at least one internal cavity which method solves at least one of the aforementioned problems.
According to the invention this object is achieved by the method for manufacturing a component having at least one internal cavity characterized by,
With the inventive method, a component may be manufactured that has internal cavities or channels of principally any shape or form. This is possible since a cavity of any shape, for example a circular groove, easily can be formed, e.g. milled, into the surface of the core element. By covering the groove with a cover element a continuous channel of closed cross-section is achieved in the core element. In the following steps of the method the core element is at least partially integrated into the body of the final component so that an internal cavity is provided in the component. The strength of the final component is very high since a metallurgical bond is formed between elements that make up the final component. The strength of the final component is substantially the same as in a component that has been manufactured from a forged, solid singular work piece. The rigidity and the lack of porosity of core element which comprise the internal cavity causes the core element to remain immovable during the heating step under isostatic pressure. Therefore is a very high dimensional accuracy of the position of the internal cavities achieved in the final component.
According to a preferred embodiment, the step of providing a first preformed solid core element comprises:
Preferably, the cavity is formed by drilling and/or cutting and/or turning and/or spark erosion.
Said cavity may comprise a first and a second bore that extend in said core element from said first and second opening to said groove.
According to one alternative, said at least second opening is gastight connected to an inlet in the form.
According to one alternative, said form is a capsule that defines the shape of the component, wherein the at least first core element and cover element are arranged in said capsule.
According to one alternative, the form is gastight joined to the first core element so that the form and the first core element together define the shape of the component.
The metallic filling is preferably material metallic powder and/or metallic pieces.
According to one alternative, the method comprises the step of arranging at least an additional core element in contact with said first preformed core element.
According to one alternative, said additional core element may comprise at least a cavity wherein said additional core element is arranged such that the cavity and the cavity in the first core element communicate.
According to one alternative said cover element comprises several cover element sections that are gastight joined to each other and to said at least first core element.
Preferably, said cover element and/or said cover element sections is/are a plate or a machined part.
According to one alternative, said core element and/or the cover element comprises at least one cooling fin that extends within said cavity.
Preferably, the surface of said cavity is provided with a roughened surface for to increasing the cooling effect.
According to one alternative, the surface of said cavity is provided with pits or transversal grooves.
Preferably, the core element and the cover element are manufactured from any of the materials Ni-alloys, Co-alloys, Ti-alloys, Cu-alloys, Fe-alloys or tool steels or carbon steels or Hadfield type steels or stainless steels such as martensitic stainless steels, chromium steels or austenitic stainless steels or duplex stainless steels or mixtures thereof.
According to one alternative, the first core element and at least one additional core elements are manufactured from different materials.
a-2c show respectively: a schematic perspective view of a core element that is used in the first preferred embodiment of the invention, a view of the lower side of the core element and a side view of the core element.
a shows schematically a top view of a cover element that is used in the first preferred embodiment of the invention,
b show schematically a cross section of the core element and the cover element of the first preferred embodiment of the invention.
c is an enlarged view of a portion of
It should be pointed out that the above description is a general description of a component that may be manufactured with the inventive method. It is obvious that the method can be applied for manufacture of any type of components with an internal cavity. For example components for diesel engines such as an air cooled valve spindle or a fluid cooled valve seat. The component could also be a fluid cooled bearing, a fluid cooled roll or a fluid cooled heat shield. It is also obvious that the cavity 11, which extends inside the body of the component can be of any form or cross section and can extend in any manner within the component. It is further obvious that the cavity can comprise any number of openings and that the openings can be located on any outer surface of the component. It is also obvious that the component can comprise more than one channel.
In the following a first preferred embodiment of the inventive method for manufacturing a component having at least one internal channel will be described.
In a first step a core element is manufactured.
At least one cavity 11 is formed in the core element 10.The cavity may be formed by any suitable method such as drilling, milling, cutting, turning, spark erosion and power pressing followed by sintering. In the present embodiment, see
In a second step, a cover element is provided. The cover element is adopted to cover openings in core element that arises during the step of forming of the cavity in the core element, so that a continuous channel of closed cross section is achieved in the core element. It is obvious that if the core element comprises several cavities, several cover elements are provided.
The cover element may be manufactured from any metallic material and with any suitable method. For example, it can be cut out from strip or bar material, it can be a forged element, a machined body, a body of sintered metal powder or a free-formed body. However, the cover element needs to be gastight, e.g. of closed porosity. Preferably, the cover element is manufactured from any of the materials: Ni-alloys, Co-alloys Ti-alloys, Cu-alloys, Fe-alloys, or tool steels or carbon steels or Hadfield type steels or stainless steels such as martensitic stainless steels, chromium steels or austenitic stainless steels or duplex stainless steels or mixtures thereof. The cover element can be of any suitable shape, for example it may be flat plate or have a block shape. Its physical dimensions, e.g. its width and thickness, depend on the strength requirements of the final component and the process circumstances during manufacturing of the component. It is also possible to provide several cover element sections that together cover one or several openings in the core element. An advantage herewith is that openings of complicated shape in the core element easily can be covered. The use of cover element sections further reduces time consuming machining of the core element into complicated shape.
a shows a cover element 30 that has a partially circular shape and is manufactured from carbon steel strip. Thus, the cover element 30 is adopted to cover the opening 12 of the groove 20 in the core element 10 that is shown in
b is a cross-sectional view of a core element 10 to which a cover element 30 is gastight joined.
The cover element 30 is gastight joined to the core element. This may be achieved by welding the cover element to the surface 13 of the core element.
In the case that the cover element 30 comprises several cover element sections, the cover element sections are gastight joined to each other and to the core element. This may be performed in any suitable order, e.g. first joining the sections to the core element and then to each other.
In a further step, a form is provided that at least partially defines the shape of the component and at least partially surround the assembly of the core element and the cover element.
In the present embodiment, see
At least one of the openings 14 and 18 on the upper side 16 of the core element 10 is connected to the gas inlet 51 in the capsule 50. The openings in the core element are thereby gastight joined to the opening in the form e.g. by a weld between the core element and the form.
According to the invention the core element 13 is designed and arranged in the capsule such that a void 70, i.e. a space, is created between the capsule 10 and the surface 13 of the core element, see
The core element and/or the capsule may be also be arranged such that further voids are created between the walls of the capsule and the core element.
The capsule is filled with metallic filling material. During filling of the capsule all voids in the capsule are filled with metallic material.
By filling void 70, the surface 13 of the core element and the cover element 30 are covered with the metallic filling material. Therefore, in the final component, at least the cover element and preferably also the core element are covered by, and metallurgically bonded to, a layer of densified metallic material that constitutes an outer portion of the final component. Thus, the cover element and at least a part of the core element will be integrated in the final component.
Depending on the position of the core and cover element in the capsule the step of filling of the capsule may be performed before positioning the assembled core and cover element in the capsule or after the assembly has been positioned in the capsule. It is also possible that the capsule is first partially filled whereupon the core element is arranged in the capsule whereupon the capsule is completely filled.
In a further step the capsule, the core element, the cover element and the filling material are heated under a predetermined time period, at a predetermined temperature and predetermined pressure so that a metallurgical bond is achieved between the core element, the cover element and the filling material.
The capsule is thereby placed in a heatable pressure chamber, normally referred to as a HIP-chamber. The heating chamber is pressurized with gas, typically argon that is pumped into the chamber to an isostatic pressure in excess of 500 bar. The chamber is heated to a temperature below the melting point of the metallic materials in the capsule, e.g. 50-500° C. below the melting point of the material with the lowest melting point or any phase that can form by a reaction between the materials in the capsule. Typically, the capsule is heated for a period of 1-3 hours depending on the materials used and the size of the component.
As mentioned above, the cavity 11 in the core element 10 is pressurised during heating in order to prevent it from collapsing. It is important that no gas escapes from the cavity 11 into the metallic filling material, e.g. through the boundary between the cover element and the core element. If gas escapes from the cavity 11 into the metallic filling material, or into the boundary of other metallic elements in the capsule, a gas film will form between the particles or pieces of the metallic filling material and prevent these from forming a metallurgical bond. Therefore must the cover element be gastight joined to the core element.
For the same reason it is important that the material of the core element and the cover element does not comprise open porosity, i.e. that they do not comprise interconnecting pores through which the gas may escape.
Prior to the heating step a vacuum may be drawn in the capsule to ensure that all gas residues, e.g. air is removed from the capsule. All openings, except opening 51 that connects the cavity with atmosphere in the HIP-chamber, are thereafter sealed
Due to the elevated pressure and temperature the core element, the cover element and the filling material deform plastically and bond metallurgically through various diffusion processes into a dense, coherent article. In metallurgic bonding, metallic surfaces bond together flawlessly with an interface that is free of defects such as oxides, inclusions or other contaminants. Two metallic elements that are bound together metallurgically will therefore form an integral body.
The capsule 10 is then allowed to cool and is, if necessary, subsequently stripped from the finished component.
Following are some further embodiments and alternatives of the present invention described.
By “metallic pieces” is in this context intended pieces of metallic material that are substantially larger than the above mentioned powder particles. The pieces could have any shape and size suitable for filling the void between the capsule and the assembled core and cover element. The metallic pieces may be manufactured with the same methods and from the same materials as described under the core element.
It is also possible to arrange further core elements adjacent elements 10 or 14, for example a core element of stainless steel or Ni-alloy which minimize the risk of diffusion of carbon from e.g. carbon steel metallic filling material (not shown in
In order to improve the cooling efficiency in the component cooling fins could be formed in the cavity 11 and/or on the cover element 20, i.e. on a side which faces the cavity 11.
Although particular embodiments have been disclosed herein in detail, this has been done for purposes of illustration only, and is not intended to be limiting with respect to the appended claims. The disclosed embodiments and alternatives can also be combined. In particular, it is contemplated by the inventor that various substitutions, alterations, and modifications may be made to the invention without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the claims. For example could the partial form described with reference to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10190593.3 | Nov 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/069701 | 11/9/2011 | WO | 00 | 5/10/2013 |