Fundamentals of Metal Casting: Overview of Casting Technology Heating and Pouring Solidification and Cooling

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FUNDAMENTALS OF METAL CASTING

1. Overview of Casting Technology


2. Heating and Pouring
3. Solidification and Cooling

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Solidification Processes
Starting work material is either a liquid or is in a
highly plastic condition, and a part is created
through solidification of the material
Solidification processes can be classified
according to engineering material processed:
Metals
Ceramics, specifically glasses
Polymers and polymer matrix composites
(PMCs)

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Figure 10.1 Classification of solidification processes.
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Casting
Process in which molten metal flows by gravity or
other force into a mold where it solidifies in the
shape of the mold cavity
The term casting also applies to the part made
in the process
Steps in casting seem simple:
1. Melt the metal
2. Pour it into a mold
3. Let it freeze

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Capabilities and Advantages of Casting
Can create complex part geometries
Can create both external and internal shapes
Some casting processes are net shape; others
are near net shape
Can produce very large parts
Some casting methods are suited to mass
production

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Disadvantages of Casting
Different disadvantages for different casting
processes:
Limitations on mechanical properties
Poor dimensional accuracy and surface
finish for some processes; e.g., sand
casting
Safety hazards to workers due to hot molten
metals
Environmental problems

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Parts Made by Casting
Big parts
Engine blocks and heads for automotive
vehicles, wood burning stoves, machine
frames, railway wheels, pipes, church bells,
big statues, pump housings
Small parts
Dental crowns, jewelry, small statues, frying
pans
All varieties of metals can be cast, ferrous and
nonferrous

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Overview of Casting Technology
Casting is usually performed in a foundry
Foundry = factory equipped for making molds,
melting and handling molten metal, performing
the casting process, and cleaning the finished
casting
Workers who perform casting are called
foundrymen

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The Mold in Casting
Contains cavity whose geometry determines
part shape
Actual size and shape of cavity must be
slightly oversized to allow for shrinkage of
metal during solidification and cooling
Molds are made of a variety of materials,
including sand, plaster, ceramic, and metal

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Open Molds and Closed Molds

Figure 10.2 Two forms of mold: (a) open mold, simply a container
in the shape of the desired part; and (b) closed mold, in which
the mold geometry is more complex and requires a gating
system (passageway) leading into the cavity.

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Two Categories of Casting Processes
1. Expendable mold processes uses an
expendable mold which must be destroyed to
remove casting
Mold materials: sand, plaster, and similar
materials, plus binders
2. Permanent mold processes uses a
permanent mold which can be used over and
over to produce many castings
Made of metal (or, less commonly, a
ceramic refractory material

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Advantages and Disadvantages
More intricate geometries are possible with
expendable mold processes
Part shapes in permanent mold processes are
limited by the need to open the mold
Permanent mold processes are more
economic in high production operations

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Sand Casting Mold

Figure 10.2 (b) Sand casting mold.

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Sand Casting Mold Terms
Mold consists of two halves:
Cope = upper half of mold
Drag = bottom half
Mold halves are contained in a box, called a
flask
The two halves separate at the parting line

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Forming the Mold Cavity
Mold cavity is formed by packing sand around
a pattern, which has the shape of the part
When the pattern is removed, the remaining
cavity of the packed sand has desired shape of
cast part
The pattern is usually oversized to allow for
shrinkage of metal during solidification and
cooling
Sand for the mold is moist and contains a
binder to maintain its shape

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Use of a Core in the Mold Cavity
The mold cavity provides the external surfaces
of the cast part
In addition, a casting may have internal
surfaces, determined by a core, placed inside
the mold cavity to define the interior geometry
of part
In sand casting, cores are generally made of
sand

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Desirable Mold Properties
Strength - to maintain shape and resist erosion
Permeability - to allow hot air and gases to
pass through voids in sand
Thermal stability - to resist cracking on contact
with molten metal
Collapsibility - ability to give way and allow
casting to shrink without cracking the casting
Reusability - can sand from broken mold be
reused to make other molds?

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Foundry Sands

Silica (SiO2) or silica mixed with other minerals


Good refractory properties - capacity to
endure high temperatures
Small grain size yields better surface finish
on the cast part
Large grain size is more permeable, allowing
gases to escape during pouring
Irregular grain shapes strengthen molds due
to interlocking, compared to round grains
Disadvantage: interlocking tends to
reduce permeability

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Types of Sand Mold
Green-sand molds - mixture of sand, clay, and
water;
Green" means mold contains moisture at
time of pouring
Dry-sand mold - organic binders rather than
clay
And mold is baked to improve strength
Skin-dried mold - drying mold cavity surface of
a green-sand mold to a depth of 10 to 25 mm,
using torches or heating lamps

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Gating System
Channel through which molten metal flows into
cavity from outside of mold
Consists of a downsprue, through which metal
enters a runner leading to the main cavity
At the top of downsprue, a pouring cup is often
used to minimize splash and turbulence as the
metal flows into downsprue

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Riser
Reservoir in the mold which is a source of liquid
metal to compensate for shrinkage of the part
during solidification
The riser must be designed to freeze after the
main casting in order to satisfy its function

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Heating the Metal
Heating furnaces are used to heat the metal to
molten temperature sufficient for casting
The heat required is the sum of:
1. Heat to raise temperature to melting point
2. Heat of fusion to convert from solid to
liquid
3. Heat to raise molten metal to desired
temperature for pouring

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Pouring the Molten Metal
For this step to be successful, metal must flow
into all regions of the mold, most importantly
the main cavity, before solidifying
Factors that determine success
Pouring temperature
Pouring rate
Turbulence

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Solidification of Metals
Transformation of molten metal back into solid
state
Solidification differs depending on whether the
metal is
A pure element or
An alloy

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Cooling Curve for a Pure Metal
A pure metal solidifies at a constant temperature
equal to its freezing point (same as melting
point)

Figure 10.4 Cooling curve for a pure metal during casting.


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Solidification of Pure Metals
Due to chilling action of mold wall, a thin skin of
solid metal is formed at the interface
immediately after pouring
Skin thickness increases to form a shell around
the molten metal as solidification progresses
Rate of freezing depends on heat transfer into
mold, as well as thermal properties of the metal

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Figure 10.5 Characteristic grain structure in a casting of a pure metal,
showing randomly oriented grains of small size near the mold wall, and
large columnar grains oriented toward the center of the casting.

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Solidification of Alloys
Most alloys freeze over a temperature range
rather than at a single temperature

Figure 10.6 (a) Phase diagram for a copper-nickel alloy system


and (b) associated cooling curve for a 50%Ni-50%Cu
composition during casting.
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Figure 10.7 Characteristic grain structure in an alloy casting,
showing segregation of alloying components in center of casting.

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Solidification Time
Solidification takes time
Total solidification time TTS = time required for
casting to solidify after pouring
TTS depends on size and shape of casting by
relationship known as Chvorinov's Rule
n
V
TST Cm
A
where TST = total solidification time; V =
volume of the casting; A = surface area of
casting; n = exponent with typical value = 2;
and Cm is mold constant.

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Mold Constant in Chvorinov's Rule
Mold constant Cm depends on:
Mold material
Thermal properties of casting metal
Pouring temperature relative to melting point
Value of Cm for a given casting operation can
be based on experimental data from previous
operations carried out using same mold
material, metal, and pouring temperature, even
though the shape of the part may be quite
different

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What Chvorinov's Rule Tells Us
A casting with a higher volume-to-surface area
ratio cools and solidifies more slowly than one
with a lower ratio
To feed molten metal to main cavity, TST for
riser must greater than TST for main casting
Since mold constants of riser and casting will
be equal, design the riser to have a larger
volume-to-area ratio so that the main casting
solidifies first
This minimizes the effects of shrinkage

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Shrinkage in Solidification and Cooling

Figure 10.8 Shrinkage of a cylindrical casting during solidification


and cooling: (0) starting level of molten metal immediately after
pouring; (1) reduction in level caused by liquid contraction during
cooling (dimensional reductions are exaggerated for clarity).

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Shrinkage in Solidification and Cooling

Figure 10.8 (2) reduction in height and formation of shrinkage


cavity caused by solidification shrinkage; (3) further reduction in
height and diameter due to thermal contraction during cooling of
solid metal (dimensional reductions are exaggerated for clarity).

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Solidification Shrinkage
Occurs in nearly all metals because the solid
phase has a higher density than the liquid
phase
Thus, solidification causes a reduction in
volume per unit weight of metal
Exception: cast iron with high C content
Graphitization during final stages of freezing
causes expansion that counteracts
volumetric decrease associated with phase
change

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Shrinkage Allowance
Patternmakers account for solidification
shrinkage and thermal contraction by making
mold cavity oversized
Amount by which mold is made larger relative
to final casting size is called pattern shrinkage
allowance
Casting dimensions are expressed linearly, so
allowances are applied accordingly

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Directional Solidification
To minimize damaging effects of shrinkage, it
is desirable for regions of the casting most
distant from the liquid metal supply to freeze
first and for solidification to progress from these
remote regions toward the riser(s)
Thus, molten metal is continually available
from risers to prevent shrinkage voids
The term directional solidification describes
this aspect of freezing and methods by
which it is controlled

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Achieving Directional Solidification
Desired directional solidification is achieved
using Chvorinov's Rule to design the casting
itself, its orientation in the mold, and the riser
system that feeds it
Locate sections of the casting with lower V/A
ratios away from riser, so freezing occurs first
in these regions, and the liquid metal supply for
the rest of the casting remains open
Chills - internal or external heat sinks that
cause rapid freezing in certain regions of the
casting

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External Chills

Figure 10.9 (a) External chill to encourage rapid freezing of the


molten metal in a thin section of the casting; and (b) the likely
result if the external chill were not used.

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Riser Design
Riser is waste metal that is separated from the
casting and remelted to make more castings
To minimize waste in the unit operation, it is
desirable for the volume of metal in the riser to
be a minimum
Since the geometry of the riser is normally
selected to maximize the V/A ratio, this allows
riser volume to be reduced to the minimum
possible value

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