This application is the U.S. National Stage of PCT/FR2019/051541, filed Jun. 24, 2019, which in turn claims priority to French patent application number 1855713 filed Jun. 26, 2018. The content of these applications are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
The present invention relates to the general field of the manufacture of ingots made of titanium-based metallic compound, such as alloys or intermetallic compounds, in particular for the manufacture of parts for an aircraft.
The ingots made of titanium-based alloy or titanium-based intermetallic compound, are generally manufactured by melting of raw material fragments in different basins, the liquid metal then being poured into a crucible in order to cool and solidify the metal to form the ingots.
However, the method for conventionally manufacturing the titanium ingots can lead to a problem of reduction of the mechanical properties of the obtained ingot relative to the desired mechanical properties.
The main aim of the present invention is therefore to overcome such a drawback by proposing, according to a first aspect of the invention, a method for manufacturing an ingot made of titanium-based metallic compound comprising the following steps:
characterized in that the method comprises the following step:
Such a step of preheating the raw material fragments allows improving the homogeneity of the metal in the basin, in particular by reduction of the presence of unmelted material in the basin.
In addition, such preheating allows reducing the temperature decrease in the basin when the newly melted metal falls in said basin, thus also improving the homogeneity by facilitating the dissolution of the unmelted materials in the basin, and increasing the melting rate of the metallic compound allowing productive gains.
In addition, such preheating allows reducing the thermal shock experienced by the raw materials during the melting step, thus reducing the off-gases of the raw materials. These off-gases can cause reactions which are likely to create inclusions, these inclusions reducing the mechanical properties of the ingots. The reactions caused by the off-gases can also produce elements which are deposited at the crucible, thus reducing the mechanical properties of the ingots. In addition, the thermal shock of the raw materials favors the projections of small solid particles of raw material which can fall further downstream in the basin and thus have a short duration for it to be dissolved, thus increasing the risk for unmelted particles to remain in the crucible and decrease the mechanical properties of the ingots.
Such a preheating step is particularly advantageous for the manufacture of ingots made of titanium-based metallic compound because these metallic compounds have a high melting temperature (titanium having a melting temperature of 1,668° C.), the titanium-based metallic compounds having a higher risk of presence of unmelted metal particles during the formation of the ingot.
The method may comprise the following characteristics, taken alone or in combination depending on the technical possibilities:
According to a second aspect, the invention proposes a system for manufacturing an ingot made of titanium-based metallic compound comprising:
characterized in that the system comprises a preheating device which is configured to heat on the conveyor the raw material fragments with a preheating temperature higher than or equal to 75% of the liquidus temperature of said raw material fragments, and strictly lower than the liquidus temperature of said raw material fragments.
The system can comprise the following characteristics, taken alone or in combination depending on the technical possibilities:
Other characteristics and advantages of the present invention will emerge from the description given below, with reference to the appended drawings which illustrate an exemplary embodiment thereof without any limitation. In the figures:
As illustrated in
The raw material fragments 3 can be master alloys, recycled material fragments or virgin raw material of titanium-based alloy or titanium-based intermetallic compound. Typically, the raw material fragments 3 can be formed by blocks of particles, such as chips, which are press agglomerated and compacted, these blocks having a length comprised between 20 cm and 50 cm for example.
By titanium-based metallic compound is understood here either a titanium-based alloy, that is to say an alloy whose titanium is the main constituent, or a titanium-based intermetallic compound, that is to say an intermetallic compound whose titanium is the main constituent. An alloy is a combination of different metals, while an intermetallic compound is a combination of at least one metal with at least one metalloid.
The metallic compound can for example be an alloy from among the following alloys: Ti17, TiBeta16, Ti21S, Ti6242 and Ti6246; or an intermetallic compound from among the following intermetallic compounds: TiAl 48-2-2 and TiNMB1. The examples given are not limiting, other alloys or titanium-based intermetallic compounds can be used.
The system 1 comprises at least one basin in which the raw material fragments 3 are melted. In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
The first basin 12 and the second basin 13 collect liquid metal 4 obtained by the melting of the raw material fragments 3.
The first basin 12 and the second basin 13 are formed on the one hand by a wall which receives the liquid metal 4, said wall being for example made of copper, and on the other hand by a cooling device which allows keeping the wall at a temperature below its deterioration temperature, said cooling device being typically produced by a coolant circulation circuit.
The raw material fragments 3 are melted in the first basin 12, then the liquid metal 4 obtained by the melting of said raw material fragments 3 is transferred to the second basin 13.
The melting of the raw material fragments 3 is carried out by heating means 14 which are located opposite the first basin 12 and the second basin 13.
The heating means 14 can for example be formed by plasma torches, electron guns, electric arc generators, laser generators or induction-heating means.
In addition, the heating means 14 are configured to keep in the molten state the liquid metal 4 in the first and second basins 12 and 13 in order to place the liquid metal 4 in the desired metallurgical condition.
The atmosphere in which the first basin 12 and the second basin 13 are located can be controlled. In order for the liquid metal 4 not to react with the atmosphere, the controlled atmosphere can, for example, be achieved by a vacuum atmosphere or by an inert gas atmosphere under controlled pressure. According to another possible variant, the controlled atmosphere is formed by a specific gas under a controlled pressure, said specific gas being adapted to react with the liquid metal 4 in order to charge said liquid metal 4, and thus the metallic compound of the ingot 2, with said specific gas.
The first basin 12 and the second basin 13 can also be exposed to an uncontrolled atmosphere.
As illustrated in
In order to cool the liquid metal 4 which is poured into the crucible 15, said crucible 15 comprises a cooling circuit which cools the walls of said crucible 15. The walls of the crucible 15, which are cooled by the cooling circuit, are made of high-thermal conductivity material, for example of copper or copper alloy.
Moreover, as can be seen in
The preheating device 16 is configured to heat the raw material fragments 3 at a preheating temperature which is higher than or equal to 75% of the liquidus temperature of said raw material fragments 3, and which is strictly lower than the liquidus temperature of said raw material fragments 3.
Such a preheating temperature allows decreasing the temperature gradient at the inlet of the first basin 12. This allows facilitating the melting of the raw material fragments 3, which reduces the presence of unmelted metal particles in the first and second basins 12 and 13, thus limiting the risk for these unmelted metal particles to reach the crucible 15.
The preheating according to the invention allows in particular reducing the presence of the small-sized unmelted metal particles by facilitating the melting of these particles, the small-sized particles being the most likely not to fall to the bottom of the first and second basins 12 and 13 and therefore to be poured with the liquid metal 4 into the crucible 15.
In addition, such a preheating temperature allows reducing the thermal shock experienced by the raw material fragments 3 when they arrive in the first basin 12. The reduction of the thermal shock allows reducing the off-gases, thus limiting the reactions caused by these off-gases which are likely to produce unwanted elements in the metallic compound degrading the mechanical properties of the ingot.
Preferably, the preheating temperature is higher than or equal to the solidus temperature of the metallic compound, which allows further accelerating the dissolution of the solid metal particles in the first and second basins 12 and 13, and allows reducing the thermal shock. The preheating temperature is always strictly lower than the liquidus temperature of the alloy.
Thus, the raw material fragments 3 are partially melted because they are at a temperature higher than the solidus temperature but strictly lower than the liquidus temperature of the metallic compound.
Even more preferably, the preheating temperature is higher than or equal to 93% of the liquidus temperature of the alloy, making it possible to further accelerate the dissolution of the solid metal particles, and to further reduce the temperature difference experienced by the raw material fragments 3. Here again, the preheating temperature is strictly lower than the liquidus temperature of the alloy.
The invention is particularly advantageous for the titanium-based metallic compounds which comprise elements having a melting temperature higher than the melting temperature of the titanium such as, for example, molybdenum, vanadium or tantalum. Indeed, the elements present in the metallic compound which have a melting temperature higher than the melting temperature of the titanium, such as for example molybdenum, vanadium and tantalum, are elements which tend to form unmelted particles in the liquid metal 4 which can reach the crucible 15.
According to a first possible variant illustrated in
According to an advantageous characteristic making it possible to limit the pollution of the raw material fragments 3 by contact with the conveyor 11, the induction-preheating device 16a is configured to ensure levitation of said raw material fragments 3 above the conveyor 11.
The configuration of the induction-preheating device 16a to ensure the gradual rise in temperature and the levitation of the raw material fragments are achieved by adapting the intensity and the frequency of the electric current passing through said induction-preheating device 16a.
According to a second variant illustrated in
Advantageously, in order to improve the efficiency of preheating of the raw material fragments 3, the preheating device comprises an image acquisition device 16c, such as for example a camera, and an image analysis device 16d, such as for example a processor and a memory on which an image processing program is recorded. The image acquisition device 16c is configured to acquire images of the preheating of the raw material fragments 3 by the generator 16b of the heating beam F.
The image acquisition device 16c is also configured to transmit the acquired images to the image analysis device 16d. The image analysis device 16d is for its part configured to analyze the images transmitted by the image acquisition device 16c and to control the orientation of the generator 16b of the heating beam F by checking that the heating beam F is indeed directed towards the raw material fragments 3, and not directed next to said raw material fragments 3, directly towards the conveyor 11.
When the image analysis device 16d detects that the heating beam F is not directed correctly, said image analysis device 16d can issue an alert so that an operator or an automaton corrects the orientation of the generator 16b of the heating beam F. The image analysis device 16d can also be configured to control the orientation of the generator 16b of the heating beam F so that when said image analysis device 16d detects that the heating beam F is not directed correctly, said image analysis device 16d automatically corrects the orientation of said generator 16b of the heating beam F.
The system 1 for manufacturing the ingot 2 made of titanium-based metallic compound is configured to implement the manufacturing method illustrated in
As illustrated in
With the embodiment of the system 1 illustrated in
Furthermore, when the preheating of the raw material fragments 3 is carried out with a generator 16b of a heating beam F, the method for manufacturing the ingot 2 made of titanium-based metallic compound can comprise a step of controlling the orientation of the heating beam F carried out during the step E2 of preheating the raw material fragments 3. This step of controlling the orientation of the heating beam F is carried out by the image analysis device 16d from the images acquired by the image acquisition device 16c.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1855713 | Jun 2018 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR2019/051541 | 6/24/2019 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2020/002811 | 1/2/2020 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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