The invention concerns a facility for continuous casting of metals. The invention more particularly concerns an ingot mold for continuous casting of metals. According to others of its aspects the invention concerns a system for measuring the temperature in a facility for continuous casting of metals as well as a system and a method for detection of breakout in a facility for continuous casting of metals.
A facility for continuous casting of metals, for example a facility for continuous casting of steel, generally includes an ingot mold into which a liquid metal is poured so that it will solidify in a suitable shape. This may for example be a bottomless ingot mold, in which case the metal cools to form a slab. In order to cool the liquid metal, walls of the ingot mold are alongside or backed by cooling devices, for example of the liquid-cooled type. The ingot mold and the cooling devices are sized according to the rate of flow of the metal so that the slab, when it leaves the ingot mold, has a solidified external surface of sufficiently great thickness to trap the metal that is still liquid located at the core of the slab.
During the pouring of the liquid metal into the ingot mold, it would be desirable to be able to have access in real time to measurements of the temperature at various points on the walls of the ingot mold. For example, it can happen that the metal adheres to the walls of the ingot mold, which is undesirable and can have considerable consequences for the productivity of the facility. This in particular generates the well-known phenomenon of breakout. The adhesion of the metal to the wall creates a zone in the slab in which the solidification of the metal does not occur appropriately, so that the slab leaves the ingot mold with an external surface of insufficient thickness in this zone. It follows that it tears and allows the metal still liquid at the core of the slab to flow out of the latter. Over and above the loss of efficiency, the liquid metal, which is therefore at a very high temperature, can damage the facility or even constitute a danger to operatives of the facility. It is therefore necessary to detect as soon as possible these breakouts in order to be able to take preventive measures, for example to slow down the rate of extraction of the slab, temporarily to shut down the facility or any other corrective measure.
There is known in the prior art a method for detecting if the metal is adhering to the walls of the ingot mold, a sign of an imminent breakout. It is based on measuring the temperature of the walls of the ingot mold at various points. In fact, it has been noted that the walls have a particular temperature profile when the metal adheres to them. A known means of measuring that temperature consists in installing regularly distributed thermocouples on the walls of the ingot molds so as to be able to detect any temperature anomaly as soon as possible.
This detection method is of interest but poses certain problems. In fact, to be able to measure the temperature of the walls at a maximum number of positions it is necessary to install a great number of thermocouples. This not only increases the cost of producing the ingot mold but also complicates the electrical connection of the thermocouples. Moreover, the thermocouples do not always enable precise and reliable measurement of the temperature of the walls, and so an unsatisfactory number of false alarms may be generated, that is to say alarms indicating an imminent breakout when this is not the case.
Another problem is linked to the configuration of the ingot mold, which usually consists of an assembly of metal plates backed by cooling devices configured to enable cooling of the metal plates by circulating a cooling fluid. To reach the zones of the ingot mold where the temperature must be measured it is necessary to pass through this cooling device and therefore through the circulating water. This leads to other problems of sealing and wiring.
Belgian patent application 2018/5193 already proposes a solution to this problem that consists in furnishing at least one of the walls of the ingot mold with a channel into which is inserted an optical fiber including a plurality of Bragg filters. This solution is noteworthy and furnishes an appropriate response to the problems mentioned above. Nevertheless, the inventors have sought to develop alternatives that could be implemented in a faster and less costly manner and could be adapted to suit complex ingot mold configurations.
An aim of the invention is to improve breakout detection by remedying the disadvantages set out hereinabove.
To this end there is provided in accordance with the invention an ingot mold for continuous casting of metals of the type consisting of an assembly of metal plates backed by cooling devices configured to allow cooling of the metal plates by the circulation of a cooling fluid, including:
To avoid any confusion, it is here specified that the terminology of the dimensions of the plate is established as follows: the length and the width are the dimensions of the plate in a section perpendicular to the casting axis of the ingot mold and the depth is the dimension of the plate on the axis of the ingot mold.
Thus the thermocouples of the prior art are replaced by an optical fiber including Bragg filters. By means of the emission of a light beam in the fiber and the detection of the reflected and/or transmitted beam, the latter enable measurement of the temperature in the wall at the level of each of the filters. Clearly the groove, the optical fiber and the tongue are much less bulky than the thermocouples and clearly these items are much simpler to install. Moreover, temperature measurement using Bragg filters is more accurate than that obtained using thermocouples, which reduces the number of false alarms.
The tongue advantageously consists of a plurality of parts.
The length of the tongue can therefore be adapted by choosing the number of parts of which it consists. This enables adaptation to the dimensions of the ingot mold.
The tongue advantageously includes an attached part formed entirely before closing the groove.
The tongue is therefore entirely formed before its installation in the ingot mold. In other words, the tongue is not formed in situ at the moment of closing the groove. This facilitates its installation because it is possible to install the tongue in the ingot mold simply by depositing it in the groove or by causing it to slide along the groove from one of the ends of the groove. The groove advantageously has a substantially uniform depth.
The transfers of heat between the plates the optical fiber are therefore just as uniform.
The ingot mold is advantageously made of copper or of copper alloy, the tongue advantageously being made of the same material.
These materials have a high thermal conductivity and thus contribute to producing a uniform transfer of heat.
The tongue is preferably welded to the ingot mold in such a manner as to close the groove by electron beam welding, although other welding techniques are equally possible, such as for example laser welding, x-ray welding or ion welding and all types of arc welding, including electric arc welding with coated electrodes, arc welding with non-fusible electrodes, arc welding with fusible electrodes, submerged arc welding, electrogas welding, diffusion welding, or brazing or soldering.
Sealed closure of the groove is therefore made possible.
The groove is advantageously situated on at least one central part of at least one of the plates.
It is therefore possible to measure the temperature in a central zone of the wall and thus to obtain a measurement that is particularly representative of the temperature of the wall.
In accordance with one embodiment, the groove extends the entire length of at least one of the plates.
The temperature of the cast metal can therefore be measured at a great number of points, which contributes to reliable breakout detection.
The optical fiber is advantageously provided with a coating or with a tube.
Thus the optical fiber is protected from mechanical loads that could damage it. Moreover, the coating or the tube enables modulation of the diameter of the optical fiber.
The optical fiber advantageously has a diameter greater than 1.6 mm.
The ingot mold advantageously includes a plurality of optical fibers contained in a plurality of substantially parallel grooves.
The number of points for measuring the temperature of the wall is therefore further increased, which contributes to more reliable detection of breakout.
When the ingot mold is the type for casting a thin slab and includes a funnel portion in the upper part, the groove is advantageously located at least in all of the funnel part. In fact, the solution proposed in Belgian patent application 2018/5193 consisting in installing the optical fiber in a channel pierced in a manner substantially parallel to the wall is very difficult to put into practise in a non-plane portion of the wall.
It is clear that this embodiment is suitable for any type of ingot mold of complex shape.
The wall will advantageously include a groove in the funnel central part and a channel pierced in the plane part, the channel opening into the groove.
There is also provided in accordance with the invention a system for measuring the temperature in a system for continuous casting of metals, including:
There is also provided in accordance with the invention a system for detection of breakout in a system for continuous casting of metals, including a temperature measurement system as defined hereinabove in which the processor is adapted to transform data on the reflected and/or transmitted light received by the emitter-receiver into information on the detection of a breakout.
There is finally provided in accordance with the invention a method of detecting a breakout in a facility for continuous casting of metals, characterized in that the temperature is measured of a wall of an ingot mold as defined hereinabove.
An embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of nonlimiting example and with reference to the appended figures, in which:
There has been represented in
The facility 2 includes ladles 4 containing liquid metal that it is wished to cool. Here there are two ladles 4 carried by a motorized arm 6. This motorized arm 6 is in particular able to move the ladles 4 that are brought full into the casting zone by a transport system (for example a traveling overhead crane, not represented) from a filling zone in which the molten metal may be poured into them, for example a furnace or a converter (not represented) before they are brought to the position illustrated in
The facility 2 includes a tundish or tundish basin 8 situated under the ladles 4. The latter have a bottom that can be opened enabling the liquid metal to flow into the tundish 8.
The tundish 8 includes a flow orifice that can be blocked by a stopper rod 10 that enables the flow of liquid metal to be controlled. The flow orifice of the tundish is extended by a submerged entrance (SEN) casting tube 11 for protection of the liquid metal poured into the ingot mold 12.
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The facility 2 includes cooling devices 14 positioned on an external surface of the ingot mold 12. These are liquid type cooling devices. To this end they include pipes in which a refrigerant fluid, for example water, flows. The refrigerant fluid absorbs heat from the liquid metal located in the ingot mold 12 in order to cool it and to solidify it. Here the metal solidifies in the form of a slab having a solidified external surface 18 isolating a liquid core 20.
The facility 2 includes a roller guide 16 located downstream of the ingot mold 12. The guide 16 enables the slab, an external surface 18 of which has solidified, to be guided out of the ingot mold 12. As can be seen in
The ingot mold 12 is shown in more detail in
The ingot mold 12 has been represented from a different angle in
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The groove 24 and the tongue 26 have a shape suitable for the passage of an optical fiber the function of which will be described below. In this instance, as can be seen in
In a variant embodiment the tongue 26 consists of a plurality of parts welded together before the groove 24 is closed by the tongue 26. Thus the length of the tongue 26 can be modulated, in particular as a function of the length of the groove 24, by choosing the number of parts of which it consists.
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The optical fiber 28 may equally be accommodated bare in the groove 24 or provided with a protective coating or inserted in a tube before being installed. This coating or tube may have the function of increasing the radius of the optical fiber 28 in order to fill all or almost all of the diameter of the groove 24. It is preferable for the optical fiber to have a diameter greater than 1.6 mm, given the possible presence of a coating or of a tube as mentioned hereinabove.
The functioning of the optical fiber 28 is illustrated in
where λreflected is the wavelength actually reflected by the filter, f is a known function, T is the temperature of the filter and λ0 is the wavelength reflected by the filter at a predetermined temperature, for example at room temperature.
These two properties enable the optical fiber 28 to be used as a temperature sensor. Initially, there are installed in the optical fiber 28 Bragg filters 34 having distinct and chosen values of reflected wavelength λ0, for example offset one by one by 5 nanometers. A light beam having a polychromatic spectrum 35a, for example white light, is then sent in the optical fiber 28 after which the wavelength peaks represented in the spectrum of the reflected beam 35b are determined. At each peak the measured value λreflected and the theoretical value of the reflected wavelength at ambient temperature λ0 are compared and the temperature T of the filter in question is calculated using the function f. Alternatively, it is possible to effect these steps on the basis of gaps in the spectrum of the transmitted beam 35c if the configuration of the channel 24 in which the optical fiber 28 is accommodated allows this.
Thus installation of the optical fiber 28 in one of the plates 22 of the ingot mold 12 makes it possible to measure the temperature of that plate at predetermined positions and to monitor its evolution over time. In order to obtain a sufficient number of measurement points it is preferable to place at least one optical fiber 28 in each of two facing plates 22, or even in each of the four plates 22 of the ingot mold 12.
Moreover, it is also preferable to place two optical fibers 28 in each plate 22 in such a manner as to be able to measure the temperature of the ingot mold 12 at two different heights. For example, the two optical fibers 28 may be placed in each plate so that they are parallel and spaced from one another by 15 to 25 centimeters.
Breakout detection is effected in the following manner.
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In order for the information obtained by the optical fibers 28a and 28b to be communicated to the uses of the facility 2, the latter includes:
The processor is moreover adapted to transform the data on the reflected and/or transmitted light received by the emitter-receiver into information on the detection of a breakout.
Thanks to these elements (which have not been represented in the figures for reasons of clarity), it is possible to transform the temperature measurement effected by the optical fibers 28 into information understandable by the users of the facility 2 as to the detection or non-detection of a breakout. In other words, the ingot mold 12 equipped with the optical fibers 28, the emitter-receiver, the processor and the terminal form a breakout detection system. In the event of positive detection of a breakout, the users are able to take actions aimed at reducing the damage caused by the breakout or even to prevent it.
The invention is not limited to the embodiments presented and other embodiments will be clearly apparent to the person skilled in the art.
In particular the ingot mold may be more conventional with a straight shape with no funnel.
The ingot mold may be provided with a plurality of optical fibers contained in a plurality of substantially parallel grooves.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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BE2019/5408 | Jun 2019 | BE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/067347 | 6/22/2020 | WO | 00 |