to Metals
to Foundry technologies
Dr. Dmitri Kopeliovich
Foundry is a process of producing metal castings.
Casting is an operation of shaping metal by pouring it in the liquid state into a mold followed by solidification.
Casting is also a metal detail, produced as a result of pouring a metal into a mold.
In some cases casting is the only method of shaping a metal or alloy: when the alloy is not malleable and therefore it’s plastic deformation is not possible or when a large detail of complex shape is to be produced.
Metal castings quality is determined by the casting properties of the metal:
Fluidity – an ability of metals and alloys to flow through the gating system filling the cavity of the casting mold and conforming its shape.
Factors determining fluidity:
The wider solidification interval of an alloy, the lower fluidity of the alloy, as a certain part of the solidifying alloy has an increased viscosity caused by the presence of solid primary crystals, formed in course of cooling the alloy below the liquidus temperature.
The fluidity of pure metals is better than that of their alloys.
Eutectic alloys, characterized by nil solidification interval, possess good fluidity.
Shrinkage is a contraction of alloy volume caused by:
All metals except bismuth have higher density in solid state, than in liquid.
Shrinkage is determined by the temperature of the cast alloy, its chemical composition and by the conditions of its solidification (cooling rate, mold shape).
When a large isolated region of liquid phase remains within solid, surrounding it, shrinkage cavity will form in this region. The common mold structure includes a riser – a “head”, in which the melt solidifies last and “feeds” the main casting with liquid alloy, compensating the casting shrinkage.
This shrinkage defect is a characteristic for the central regions of castings (ingots) of the alloys with a wide temperature range of solidification. In these castings “feeding” melt is not able to infiltrate through the interlacing dendrites. The local micro-spaces between the dendrites arm remain isolated from the melt in riser forming micro-cavities or shrinkage porosity.
to top
Surface quality is determined by:
Casting cracks are result of internal stresses caused by a non-uniform cooling of the casting.
Alloys having low ductility are the most susceptible to cracks formation.
Hot cracks form during solidification of the alloy within the solidification interval.
Cold cracks form in completely solidified casting during its consequent cooling.
to Metals
to Foundry technologies