The present disclosure relates to a vacuum smelting device, and in particular, to a vacuum smelting device with mold temperature control design and a method for manufacturing a titanium-aluminium intermetallic alloy.
Compared with other intermetallic alloys, a titanium-aluminum (Ti—Al) intermetallic alloy has adequate comprehensive performance and has properties such as low density, high melting point, high oxidation resistance, and excellent high-temperature strength and rigidity. Moreover, the elastic modulus of the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy is much higher than that of other structural materials, and the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy used as a structural workpiece can significantly improve tolerance to high-frequency vibration. Compared with a nickel (Ni)-based alloy, the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy further has better high-temperature creep resistance and good flame-retardant performance.
Ti—Al intermetallic alloys can be improved currently through alloy composition design or mold temperature to enhance the casting properties of Ti—Al intermetallic alloys and reduce the defect generation; therefore, cast forming is deemed to be the most cost-effective Ti—Al intermetallic alloys process for product production. To enhance the properties of Ti—Al intermetallic alloys, typically a variety of different alloy elements are added, such as Nb, Cr, Mo, Mn, and W. etc. These elements will lead to change of the alloy phase diagram, for example, β-stable element (e.g., Nb, Cr, etc.) will enlarge the β-phase region. Studies indicated that adding niobium element can enhance the mechanical properties and high temperature resistance significantly. However, niobium element will cause segregation due to high melting point, and thus result in uneven alloy composition. Based on above factors, adding multiple elements will affect cast forming, so that change of phase diagram occurs during solidification due to different compositions or different cooling modes of metallic fluid. Nevertheless, phase composition, micro-segregation and grain size are key factors affecting cast structure of Ti—Al intermetallic alloys.
The patent document (CN101235450A) discloses a preparation method of a nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy. It is to add metal element vanadium on the basis of nickel-aluminium alloy to obtain a high-temperature-resistant nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy, so as to greatly improve the mechanical properties, hardness, strength, toughness and plasticity of alloy. The preparation method includes steps of precising raw material ratio; selecting chemical substances; pre-cuting and crushing; cleaning a melting furnace, a melting crucible and a casting mold; vacuuming extraction; inputting argon; argon blowing and stirring; cooling by water return; high-temperature smelting; casting; preparing nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy ingots; finishing the ingot surface; processing in an aging treatment under high temperature, vacuum, and argon protection; and finally obtaining nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy products. The melting temperature is 1900° C., and the aging temperature is 750° C., the aging time is 1100 hours, the prepared nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy has stable mechanical properties, the high temperature resistance melting point can reach 1394° C., the hardness can reach HV590, the yield strength can reach 910 MPa, the tensile strength can reach 1102 MPa, and the elongation rate can be increased by 50%, and the impact toughness can be increased by 43%. However, the casting molds mentioned of the vacuum melting furnaces in the above-mentioned patent documents for preparing nickel-aluminium-vanadium alloy do not include a mold temperature control design for increasing the as-cast grain size.
Therefore, a vacuum smelting device with mold temperature control design is required to resolve the foregoing problems.
An objective of the present disclosure is to provide a vacuum smelting device with mold temperature control design, which can maintain mold temperature.
According to the above objective, the present disclosure provides a vacuum smelting device with mold-temperature control design includes: a chamber body and a cabin door, wherein the chamber body and the cabin door form a vacuum closed space; a smelting crucible disposed in the vacuum closed space for smelting raw materials to a molten metal; a casting mold also disposed in the vacuum closed space for accommodating the molten metal poured from the smelting crucible, and solidifying the molten metal to an as-cast alloy; and a mold-temperature control module surrounding the casting mold for controlling the temperature of the casting mold.
The present disclosure further provides A method of manufacturing a Ti—Al intermetallic alloy comprising the following steps of: a smelting step: placing a plurality of raw materials of the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy in a vacuum smelting device according to claim 1, and melting the raw materials to a molten metal soup of the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy in the closed vacuum space; and a casting step: controlling the temperature of the casting mold in the same closed vacuum space, pouring the molten metal soup of the Ti—Al intermetallic alloy into the casting mold, and solidifying the molten metal soup to an as-cast alloy.
The vacuum smelting device with mold temperature control design of the present application has the following advantages: First, the mold temperature control module designed in the chamber body can make the process link, without manual movement and waiting for vacuuming time, greatly improving production efficiency. Second, it can maintain the mold temperature, avoid the heat loss of the casting mold, and achieve higher quality titanium-aluminium intermetallic alloy products. Third, different as-cast alloy components produce different temperatures of target structure. The vacuum melting device with mold temperature control design of the present application can control the temperature of the casting mold more accurate, and can make the structure more uniform and reduce the number of subsequent heat treatment processes.
In order to make the above or other objectives, features, and characteristics of the present disclosure more obvious and understandable, the relevant embodiments of the present disclosure are described in detail as follows with reference to the drawings.
The embodiments of the present disclosure are described in detail below in conjunction with the drawings. The attached drawings are mainly simplified schematic diagrams, which only schematically illustrate the basic structure of the present disclosure. Therefore, only components related to the present disclosure are marked in these drawings, and the displayed components are not drawn according to the number, shape, size ratio, etc. of the actual implementation. The actual size of the actual implementation is a selective design, and the layout of the components may be more complicated.
For example, the as-cast alloy of the present disclosure is the Ti—Al intermetallic as-cast alloy, and the alloy composition in the as-cast alloy is Ti-48Al-3Cr-3Nb (at %), which has well fluidity. The raw materials of the as-cast alloy comprise pure titanium of Gr.1 (99.96 wt %), aluminum-niobium (niobium content: 60 wt), pure chromium (99.9 wt %) and pure aluminum (99.999 wt %). The raw materials of the as-cast alloy are smelted in the water-cooled copper crucible of the vacuum smelting device shown in
After the casting ingot is taken out from the casting mold, the casting ingot will be processed to become tensile test bar and specimen for microstructure observation.
In this study of the present disclosure, Ti-48Al-3Cr-3Nb intermetallic alloy is poured in the metal mold and ceramic mold at different temperatures (1100° C., 850° C., 650° C. and 500° C.), and its change of cast structure and strength after solidification is observed to obtain the following conclusion:
First, the microstructures of the casting part of the Ti-48Al-3Cr-3Nb intermetallic alloy cast by the vacuum smelting device are all fully lamellar structure whose phase is mainly γ-TiAl phase and α2-Ti3Al phase.
Second, the cast structure of the casting part from the metal mold is mostly columnar crystal, but its lamellar structure is finer; and the cast structure of the casting part from the ceramic mold is mostly cubic crystal with better crystallization, but its lamellar structure is coarser.
Third, the elongation of the cast structure of the casting part from the ceramic mold is very low at room temperature. It needs improvement with subsequent heat treatment, where the crystallization of C—TiAl at 1100° C. is the best. This indicates that the atomic diffusion tends to be balanced solidification more completely and there are opportunities to reduce the processing time for homogenization with heat treatment, and the temperature of the casting mold is controlled in accordance with the α+γ temperature range of Ti—Al intermetallic alloy. Subsequently, it can reduce the time of heat treatment and homogenization, and facilitate the acquisition of target structure.
Fourth, when pouring is performed in the ceramic mold at lower temperature (1100° C.), elements with higher atomic weight (Nb, Cr) in the molten metal soup has more sufficient energy to diffuse during phase transition in the high temperature environment, so that its balance of solidification is more complete, and the organization is also more uniform. When pouring is performed in the ceramic mold at lower temperature (850° C., 650° C. and 500° C.), the cooling speed is faster due to large temperature difference, so that elements are hard to achieve balance status, incomplete phase transition is thus resulted and causes serious segregation in the cast structure where its lamellar structure is less favorable for observation, and the organization is not uniform.
The vacuum smelting device with mold temperature control design of the present application has the following advantages: First, the mold temperature control module designed in the chamber body can make the process link, without manual movement and waiting for vacuuming time, greatly improving production efficiency. Second, it can maintain the mold temperature, avoid the heat loss of the casting mold, and achieve higher quality titanium-aluminium intermetallic alloy products. Third, different as-cast alloy components produce different temperatures of target structure. The vacuum melting device with mold temperature control design of the present application can control the temperature of the casting mold more accurate, and can make the structure more uniform and reduce the number of subsequent heat treatment processes.
Based on the above, only the preferred implementations or embodiments of the technical means adopted by the present disclosure for solving the problems are described, and are not intended to limit the scope of patent implementation of the present disclosure. That is, all equivalent changes and modifications made in accordance with the scope of the patent operation of the present disclosure or made in accordance with the scope of the patent of the present disclosure fall within the scope of the patent of the present disclosure.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2806271 | Operhall | Sep 1957 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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101235450 | Aug 2008 | CN |