The present invention relates to improvements in the casting of both ferrous and non-ferrous metals.
More particularly, the invention provides an apparatus and a method for reducing inclusions, shrinkage blowholes, porosity and segregation in metal castings during the casting process, and for improving the grain structure, mechanical properties and yield of ingots and other castings.
While metals have been cast for thousands of years, certain difficulties in producing perfect gravity castings have remained until the present day. During the casting process, as liquid metal is poured into a casting mold, the liquid cools and solidifies firstly in proximity to the mold walls and later also in the casting center. Because the cooling process is accompanied by substantial contraction, a void or voids, referred to as shrinkage blowholes, are formed in the casting, typically in its upper central region. In steel production, shrinkage blowholes cause the rejection of the top 5-20% of the ingot, which is cut off and discarded. One attempt at reducing the loss caused by shrinkage blowholes is to partially deoxidize mild steel in the ladle, so that shrinkage blowhole is transformed to numerous distributed stall blowholes which can be later closed by rolling. The more general solution for this problem is the use of exothermic or isolation hot top, either by plates or by powder. The hot top allows maintaining a molten metal reservoir at the ingot's top, in order to feed the blowholes in molten metal.
A similar type of wastage occurs during normal sand casting. In order to ensure that the mold is completely filled, several large risers are used to facilitate metal entry into the mold. Before the casting leaves the foundry the risers are cut off and discarded. A further effect in metal alloys casting is the forming during cooling of dendrites, these being formed during solidification as various points in the melt mass take up a lattice structure. During the formation of dendrites, impurities, such as metallic oxides and nitrides are pushed outwards to form a crystal grain boundary, these later forming a site for the initiation of cracks in a finished component. A concentration of these impurities is referred to as inclusions. Careful mold design and lower pouring temperatures can to some extent combat this.
Gases, from the atmosphere or other sources are also present in the liquid metal, these being the main cause of casting porosity. Inclusions of hydrogen, oxygen and other gases can be much reduced by casting liquid alloys in a vacuum chamber, but the process is only economic for the production of highest quality alloys.
Continuous casting is today the major method for producing long metal ingots (billets, blooms and slabs), which are cut to any required length after solidification is complete. In the most-used system, metal is poured continuously from a tundish into a water-cooled mold. The cast rod is advanced by means of rollers and cooled by water jets. The problems of porosity, impurities, cracks and coarse grain size can all appear also with this method, and much effort has been made to combat these problems.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,307,280 Ecer discloses a method of filling casting voids after they have already been formed. The void needs to be detected and mapped, after which the casting is pressed between two electrodes and a current sufficient to cause local melting near the void is applied. The internal void is said to be collapsed thereby and migrates to the surface to cause a dimple that can be filled. The method is of course inapplicable to the elimination of solid inclusions such as sulfides and silicates. Applying roller pressure to the ingot during continuous casting is proposed by Fukuoka et al. in Japanese Patent no. JP56050705A2. Pressure is said to prevent the generation of a crack on the bottom side of the casting groove. The roller is located at the point where the bent ingot is straightened. Obviously this process is of no help in reducing inclusions or in improving the microstructure of the metal.
Lowry et al in U.S. Pat. No. 4,770,724 describe an unusual continuous casting method for metals which claims to eliminate voids and flaws and to produce a dense homogeneous product. This is achieved by forcing the metal to flow upwards, against gravity, by means of an electromagnetic field that also provides containment forces. As this process is limited to a small cross section, and can not be applied on large ingots slabs or blooms.
It is therefore one of the objects of the present invention to obviate the disadvantages of prior art casting methods and to provide an improved method and an apparatus for producing better quality ingots and other castings.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an apparatus that will break up dendrites into small pieces and thereby, reduce the grain size of the finished casting. Yet a further object of the present invention is to stir the liquid metal during solidification to improve homogeneity and to allow light-density inclusions and gases to rise to the surface of the casting.
The present invention achieves the above objects by providing an apparatus for reducing shrinkage blowholes, inclusions, porosity and grain size in metallic castings and for improving homogeneity therein, said apparatus comprising:
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention there is provided an electric arc casting apparatus wherein multiple electrodes are provided, each electrode being positionable over at least one of the risers of a sand or permanent mold casting for producing separate moving electric arcs over each riser.
In a preferred process of the present invention there is provided a method for reducing shrinkage blowholes, inclusions, porosity and grain size in metallic castings and for improving homogeneity and yield therein, said method comprising
Yet further embodiments of the method and the apparatus invention will be described hereinafter.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,756,749 Praitoni et al. there is described and claimed a process for the continuous casting of steel from a tundish having several casting spouts. While in the tundish, the steel is subjected to further heating, which in claim 5 is a transferred arc plasma torch Henryon, in U.S. Pat. No. 5,963,579 describes a similar process. Absorption of gas can reoccur while metal is poured from the tundish to the mold, and no solution to porosity and segregation is provided.
In contradistinction thereto, the present invention describes a method and apparatus for applying a moving electric arc directly to the upper surface of the casting during solidification. The advantages of such arrangement, which have been stated, result from stirring the metal in the mold during casting itself. Such stirring just prior to solidification breaks up coarse dendrites into smaller solids, as seen in
It will thus be realized that the novel apparatus of the present invention serves to greatly improve the quality and homogeneity of castings, and to achieve more consistent hardness therein, as will be clearly evident from comparative photographs and further data which will be seen in the figures.
It is to be stressed that the method and apparatus to be described have been tested in practice. For example, a 12-head apparatus for the sand casting of cylinder heads in accordance with claims 8 and 17 of the present invention has been built and operated to meet the objects of the invention. An example of riser volume reduction and increase casting productivity will also be seen in
The invention will now be described further with reference to the accompanying drawings, which represent by example preferred embodiments of the invention. Structural details are shown only as far as necessary for a fundamental understanding thereof. The described examples, together with the drawings, will make apparent to those skilled in the art how further forms of the invention may be realized.
In the drawings:
Turning first to
In
The apparatus 10 supports an electric arc electrode 14, which when powered forms a moving electric arc 16 over the upper surface 18 of a liquid metal 12 being cast:
A stand 20 and arm 22 suspend the electrode 14 over the upper surface 18 after or during pouring. The arm 22 is height adjustable so that the electrode 14 can be positioned above the metal surface 18.
A second electrode 24 is attached to a metallic surface 26 of the mold 28 being used for casting, for completion of an electric circuit 30 including the electric arc 16, seen to better effect in
Electronic controls 32 used to control current and arc movement are connected between the apparatus 10 and a power supply 34.
Preferably the power supply 34 produces DC current (AC current, RF stabilizer, etc are suitable as well) and is connected with the positive terminal to the electrode 14, the negative being connected to a metal part 26 of the mold 28.
With reference to the rest of the figures, similar reference numerals have been used to identity similar parts.
Referring now to
Advantageously there is provided a refractory guard ring 60, preferably made of a ceramic material, which is positioned on the upper surface 36 of the ingot 48. The ring 60 maintains exclusion of the non-metallic impurities such as casting powder from the upper surface 36.
Referring now to
The diagram shows two electric circuits 30, 74. The inner high-power circuit 30 provides power to form the electric arc 16. The outer low-power circuit 74 connects the tundish 70 to the mold 72 and is for stabilizing control of the electric arc, and directing the arc towards the center of the mold 72.
The method comprises the following steps.
STEP A. Pouring a liquid metal either ferrous or non-ferrous, into a mold 28 having an electrically-conductive component 26.
STEP B. Providing a electric arc electrode 14 and positioning same slightly above, typically 2-20 mm, above the upper surface of the molten metal.
STEP C. Applying an electric current to the electrode 14 to form an arc between the electrode 14 and the upper surface of the liquid metal 18. In the present preferred method, the current is DC. The arc moves continually the lower face 85 of the electrode 14, to stir the liquid metal, to break dendrites (
Referring again to
STEP A. Pouring a liquid metal 48 or 76 into a mold 28 or 72.
STEP B. Removing casting powder from the upper surface 36 of a liquid metal in an ingot 48 being cast by blasting an inert gas such as argon thereover. Preferably a stream of the inert gas is retained until casting is finished to protect the casting from oxidization and nitrogen pickup while still partially liquid.
STEP C. Preventing the return of the casting powder by placing a refractory guard ring 60 on the upper surface 36 of the casting.
STEP D. Providing an electric arc electrode 50 and positioning same slightly above the upper surface 36 of the molten metal.
STEP E. Applying an electric current to the electrode 50 to form an electric arc 16 between the electrode 50 and the upper surface 36, so as to stir the liquid metal 48, to break coarse dendrites if present, to allow light-density impurities including gases to reach the upper surface, and to maintain a central molten pool of metal to fill voids forming in the casting due to cooling shrinkage.
STEP F. Continually moving the electric arc 16 over the upper surface. Such movement takes place automatically with a correctly formed electrode 50.
Referring again to
STEP A. Casting a liquid metal into a mold 80.
STEP B. Providing a plurality of spaced-apart electric arc electrodes 14 and positioning each electrode 14 slightly above the upper surface of each riser.
STEP C. Applying an electric current to the electrodes 14 to form a moving plasma between the electrodes and the upper surfaces of the liquid metal.
Referring now to
Seen in
Referring now to
a shows two steel sand castings 160, 162, outer dimensions of each being approximately 800×650 mm and wall thickness between 50 and 75 mm. The castings 160, 162 weighed 310 kg each, and were cast through a single riser 164, 166 each. The casting 160 on the left was produced by conventional means, the riser 164 being discarded weighing 140 kg. The casting 162 on the right side was produced using the method of the present invention, which made possible the use of a riser 166 which when discarded weighed only 26 kg.
b shows two aluminum cylinder head sand castings 168, 170. The castings have 10 raisers 172, 174 each. Casting 168 was cast by conventional means and full size risers while casting 170 was cast applying the method of the present invention, acting on each raiser using apparatus 78 as was seen in
The scope of the described invention is intended to include all embodiments coming within the meaning of the following claims. The foregoing examples illustrate useful forms of the invention, but are not to be considered as limiting its scope, as those skilled in the art will readily be aware that additional variants and modifications of the invention can be formulated without departing from the meaning of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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140246 | Dec 2000 | IL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IL01/01150 | 12/12/2001 | WO |