This present invention concerns the area of forging using pressure-type forging machines such as hydraulic presses.
As the performance of aeronautical turbomachines increases, the parts of which they are made must present improved mechanical characteristics. In particular, this means avoiding the appearance of surface cracks or other faults in the mass. Thus, for aeronautical applications, the use of the titanium alloys has increased in order to satisfy both the requirements of reducing mass and achieving the best compromise between mechanical characteristics and behaviour in service corresponding to performance improvement.
To this end, forging techniques have also evolved. Nowadays, a tool is used that has been heated beforehand in order to ensure better distribution of temperature in the part during the pressing operation.
It is also possible to use an isothermal forging technique, where the part and the tool are brought to the same temperature, but this is difficult and expensive to bring about.
Again, it is possible to use conventional forging machines with a tool of the “hot die” or “hot matrix” type.
The invention is connected in particular with this last technique.
However, the temperature of the steel tool cannot exceed 450 to 500° C., due to the thermo-mechanical limitations of the material.
In order to be able to increase the forging temperature without the need to use an isothermal forging technique, it was necessary to employ higher-strength alloys, such as nickel-based superalloys. This made it possible to heat the tool up to 750° C.
The simplest design would be one using a monoblock tool. However, the cost of this would be high, and the feasibility rendered difficult by the volume of alloy material to be manipulated.
This led to the design of bimetallic tools. The active part, meaning the engraved die, is in nickel-based refractory superalloy. It is mounted in a removable fashion and clamped in a steel support called the insert holder. The function of the latter is to distribute the forces exerted by the press and to store the heat.
For the implementation of this technique, the two elements constituting this tool are heated separately in furnaces that are heated to 450-500° C. and 750° C. respectively. The die is placed in the insert holder, and its position adjusted by means of appropriate retention cleats or keys, and the assembly is then transferred to the machine, where it is secured to mounting plates. These operations are performed for both tools—top and bottom.
The method described above has several drawbacks:
In order to reduce the amount of handling, it is also possible to effect the heating of the tools by means of a part known as the “martyr”. However heating efficiency is very mediocre. There is no control over the temperature. It is always necessary to immobilise two furnaces, one of them at high temperature for the martyr part, of the order of 1000° C.
Another method would be to heat the tools in situ by means of gas jets, but tests have shown that heating efficiency is mediocre as before, with the addition of low yield.
The applicant has set the objective of developing a process for heating the tools of forging machines or presses that will remedy the drawbacks outlined above.
According to the invention, the process for the heating of a forging machine tool, including an insert holder and an insert having one free face bearing a forging impression, in preparation for a forging operation in the said forging machine, is characterised by the fact that the insert holder includes a furnace element that includes at least one burner and one flue for removal of the gases, forming, together with the said face of the insert, a closed heating chamber where the said chamber is heated until the insert reaches a given temperature, upon which the furnace element is removed. Advantageously, the said chamber is heated by the combustion of a combustible fluid within the latter.
In particular, the role of the removable furnace element is to superheat the insert in relation to the insert holder. Preferably, the insert and insert holder assembly are first heated in an oven up to a first temperature which is less than the said given temperature.
The solution of the invention has the following advantages:
In particular, the process is adaptable to each type and geometry of tool.
Thus according to another characteristic, when the forging machine includes two tools each with an insert holder and an insert, use is made of a furnace element in the form of a cylindrical ring. This element is positioned against and between both insert holders so as to constitute the said heating chamber.
When the tool is of the deep cavity type, like an extrusion vessel, use is made of a furnace element in the form of a bell with a bottom wall. This element is placed on the tool so as to constitute the said heating chamber.
According to a particularly advantageous application of the process, advantage is taken of the fact that the materials constituting the insert and the insert holder have different expansion coefficients. The insert, in particular, is a superalloy of nickel and the insert holder is made of steel. The insert is mounted in the insert holder so that it has a negative play, meaning that it is held tightly when the insert is brought to the said given temperature, while still being removable when it returns to a temperature that is below the first temperature, in particular to ambient temperature.
The advantages of this particular solution, are as follows:
The invention also covers a removable furnace element for implementation of the process. According to one characteristic, it includes a metal wall, coated on the inside with a layer of insulation, and with at least one burner. Preferably, the burner is oriented tangentially so as to produce a vortex-like flow along the wall. The element advantageously includes a means of removing the combustion gases.
The furnace element advantageously forms part of a removable heating assembly comprising a means of feeding with combustion fluids and a resource for regulation of the heating power and time.
Other characteristics and advantages will appear on reading the following description of one method of implementation of the invention, with reference to the attached drawings, in which:
A forged part is manufactured by placing a blank between two dies or matrices, each bearing an appropriate impression, and then these two dies are moved toward each other with sufficient pressure to deform the blank so as to obtain a part whose geometry matches that of the impressions.
The installation of
The wall of the furnace element includes an opening through which a burner 30 opens into the chamber. The burner is supplied with combustion fluids by flexible hoses 31 and 32 connected to a feed unit 38, which here is mobile. This unit includes fluid control resources 33, and resources 34 to monitor this feeding process in order to regulate the heating power, possibly with a means of regulating the temperature. As an example, the fluid feed valve for the combustion can be controlled by a temperature regulator. This involves heating the chamber, preferably as rapidly as possible so as to reduce the heat losses through the wall of the insert holder.
A second opening passes through the wall 21 and is connected to a flue 27 for removal of the combustion gases. Finally, it can be seen that lugs 25 are welded to the wall 21 and form grasping points for handling the furnace element.
Heating of the tools is effected in the following manner:
According to one particularly advantageous method of implementation, the inserts 1 and 3 are dimensioned in relation to the positioning in their respective insert holders so that there is a small amount of play at ambient temperature. This play allows the inserts to be inserted and removes easily.
This play is preferably chosen so that it is taken up when the tools leave the oven at the first temperature, between 450 and 500° C.
Then, when the inserts are superheated using the above method, they continue to expand, and are then held tightly in the insert holder. The play is said to be negative. These form an assembly that is very resistant to the stresses to which they are subjected during the forging of parts.
The invention is not limited to the application just described.
The tool 200 is composed of an insert holder 210, in steel for example, in the form of a cylindrical pot with a bottom, containing an insert 201 in superalloy. The insert 201 covers the inner wall of the pot. The shape is chosen so as to allow the introduction of a blowing punch vertically into the pot for the extrusion of a metal located in the bottom of the pot.
During the heating operation the pot contains neither a punch nor a part.
In order to effect the superheating of the insert 201, a removable furnace element 120 in the form of a bell, is positioned so that it rests on the lip of the insert holder 210. The element 120 is composed of a cylindrical metal wall 121 that is coated with insulation 122, and of a transverse end wall 123. The diameter is determined by that of the insert holder. On this wall 123, a burner 130 can be seen with its combustion-fluid feed hoses. The burner 130 is extended to the bottom of the pot by a tube 131, in such a way that combustion occurs as close as possible to the bottom of the insert. Arrows indicate the circulation of the hot combustion gases along the inner face of the insert. These gases then exit via the flue 127 attached to the wall 121.
When it is desired to superheat the superalloy insert in relation to the insert holder 210, the furnace element 120 is employed by placing it on the pot 200 so as to constitute a closed chamber, formed firstly by the insert 201 and secondly by the interior of the bell 120. Combustion is created in the chamber so as to heat the insert and raise it to the desired temperature. When the temperature is attained, the bell 120 is removed, and the forging operation can take place.
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20060086169 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |