EP0032881B1 - Granulated material, and production method of same, as additive for improving properties of foundry molding sands - Google Patents

Granulated material, and production method of same, as additive for improving properties of foundry molding sands Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0032881B1
EP0032881B1 EP81830010A EP81830010A EP0032881B1 EP 0032881 B1 EP0032881 B1 EP 0032881B1 EP 81830010 A EP81830010 A EP 81830010A EP 81830010 A EP81830010 A EP 81830010A EP 0032881 B1 EP0032881 B1 EP 0032881B1
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Prior art keywords
refractory
granulated material
providing
granules
lustrous carbon
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EP81830010A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0032881A1 (en
Inventor
Giovanni Novelli
Athos Rinaldi
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Industria Chimica Carlo Laviosa SpA
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Industria Chimica Carlo Laviosa SpA
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Priority to AT81830010T priority Critical patent/ATE6835T1/en
Publication of EP0032881A1 publication Critical patent/EP0032881A1/en
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C1/00Compositions of refractory mould or core materials; Grain structures thereof; Chemical or physical features in the formation or manufacture of moulds
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C1/00Compositions of refractory mould or core materials; Grain structures thereof; Chemical or physical features in the formation or manufacture of moulds
    • B22C1/02Compositions of refractory mould or core materials; Grain structures thereof; Chemical or physical features in the formation or manufacture of moulds characterised by additives for special purposes, e.g. indicators, breakdown additives

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a granulated material comprising a refractory framework coated with a material fit for providing "lustrous carbon” and suitable for being used as additive to foundry molding sand in order to improve its properties.
  • the invention also relates to a method for the production of said granulated material as well as to the compositions of the molding sands containing such material.
  • Molding sand actually used in foundry practice for the production of molds for cast- iron castings consists of sand and clay as binder. Bentonite is especially used with advantage as binding clay.
  • a coal dust is usually added with the main purpose of preventing formation of defects on the surface of castings. Said defects, as it is known, are prevalently due to the thermal expansion of the sand and to metal-mold material reactions such as the formation of ferrous oxide on the surface of castings which, by reaction with silica, produces low-melting point silicates responsible for surface roughness in the castings.
  • the coal dust absorbs the thermal expansion of the sand, since during casting, when the surface temperature of the mold rises to about 1000°C, it is caused to distill releasing volatile matter and increasing the void around the expanding sand grains. Furthermore said volatile matter generates an inert atmosphere and produces "lustrous carbon" which coats the sand grains with a refractory film, not wettable by molten metal, thus avoiding the metal from reacting with the mold material.
  • “Lustrous carbon” is defined as an allotropic, optically isotropic state of the carbon having a microcrystalline, essentially bidimensional structure, intermediate between amorphous carbon and graphite. Lustrous carbon is obtained on wide specific surfaces by pirolysis of heavy hydrocarbons which are released by carbon-based materials during contact with the molten metal. Properties, characteristics and methods of analysis concerning lustrous carbon are extensively described by V. I. Bindermagel, A. Kolors, K. Orthus: Schnelltechnisch Kunststoff Anlagen aus Formstoffzusatzen (method of analysis for mold materials additives), Giesserei, Vol. 51, 12 Nov., page 729-730 (1964).
  • coal dust improves green and dry strength of the sand and reduces gas permeability.
  • Coal dusts which have been extensively used in the past are natural substances such as milled low-grade anthracite or pearl-pitch, characterized by a low content of ash and noxious products such as sulphur, with a lustrous carbon yield not greater than 12% of its own weight and normally lower than 10%. More recently advanced techniques for the preparation of coal dusts have introduced the use of synthetic substances yielding more than 70% of lustrous carbon, thus considerably reducing (up to 7 times) the amount of coal dust used.
  • molding sands which contain 80-85% by weight of a refractory material, clay substance as binders and the above mentioned carbon-based materials
  • synthetic substances with a high yield of lustrous carbon and natural substances such as low-grade anthracite powders or mixtures thereof.
  • the molding sands after their use for molding, are continuously regenerated to produce new molds and are added with refractory material, clay binder and carbon-based additives at each cycle.
  • silica sand The most common refractory material used for the preparation of molding sands is silica sand because of its low cost; other types of sand, such as olivine, chamotte, chromite, zircon, sillimanite, mullite and the like can be used for particular purposes. Nevertheless it is well known that with respect to other kinds of sands, a serious drawback of silica sand consists in that it has a higher thermal expansion coefficient, which moreover increases suddenly at about 500°C in correspondence to the quartz allotropic transformation from the alpha to beta state.
  • silica sand is generally used, as well as compositions based on bentonite or binding clays as binders, low-grade anthracite powders or synthetic materials or mixtures thereof as carbon-based additives.
  • Another object of the invention is to produce quartz- and dust-free material to be used for the . preparation of molding sands, thereby reducing both pollution of the working environment and material handling problems.
  • a granulated material for adding to foundry molding sands for improving its properties is defined in claim 1.
  • the refractory framework may be made with a material having a null or very low thermal expansion coefficient, such as zircon, chamotte, chromite, olivine, sillimanite or mullite sands and preferably consisting of a silicate with a content of free crystalline silica not greater than 3%.
  • the addition of only one component to the foundry molding sands has the double effect of adding a coal dust and of regenerating the sand with a refractory material, thus avoiding the handling of powder-producing materials and contemporaneously adding a refractory material, during regenerative additions, which progressively improves the dilatometric properties of the refractory framework as a whole.
  • the refractory frameworkmateriai is precoated with a substance fit for producing a considerable amount of lustrous carbon upon melting.
  • lustrous carbon producing material organic polymers with softening temperature range of 70-180°C are generally used, such as plastics or resins of the type of polyethylene, polypropylene, coumaronic resins, polystyrene, glycerophtalic resins, petrolic resins, glysonite and pitchy substances, phenolic resins and more generally any other material fit for producing, during casting, lustrous carbon according to foundry methods in an amount ranging between 15 and 90% of its own weight.
  • a method for producing the granulated material according to the invention may comprise melting the organic material and mixing it in a hot process with the granules of refractory material.
  • Another possible method is based on the fact that said organic material is solvent-soluble and therefore can be directly added to the granules of refractory material when mixed in a drum with a solvent, in order to produce a proper resin coating on the granules by evaporating the solvent, which is recovered in a subsequent step.
  • a person skilled in the art is well aware of how selection of the solvent, on the basis of the type of organic material used, is to be carried out.
  • a particularly preferred solvent is white spirit.
  • the material produced according to said methods is homogeneous, granular and dust-free, each granule being coated with a layer of carbon-based material yielding a high percentage of lustrous carbon.
  • Such homogeneous granulated material is directly used for regenerating molding sands, in place of the two separate components of refractory framework and coal dust.
  • a practical, particularly preferred application of this invention provides for the use of olivine sand, chromite sand or the like or their mixtures either with a granule size ranging between 0.1 and 0.4 mm or as a powder.
  • the sand, or sand mixture is heated to 150°C and then mixed with coumaronic resin; the percentage of the resin is 10% calculated on the weight of the refractory framework. After a few minutes of mixing, during which liquefied resin produces a coating on the refractory granules, the mixture is cooled and sieved to break any possible lump, thus obtaining a dust-free granulated material.
  • the mixture is cooled and discharged onto a vibrating screen to obtain a granulated material with a granule size ranging between 0.1 and 0.3 mm, each granule being coated with polystyrene.
  • Said cromite sand precoated with polystyrene yields 7-8% of its own weight in lustrous carbon, the same amount being provided by a coal dust obtained from the grinding of a low-grade anthracite.
  • a synthetic material can be added to a molding sand according to normal practice in the art for the addition of coal dust.
  • olivine sand with granule size ranging between 0.06 and 0.4 mm are fed to a mixing drum with 100 kg of a solution containing 50% of white spirit and 50% of petrolic resin, with the following characteristics: after a few minutes of mixing, the solvent is sucked from the mixing drum to completely coat the sand granules with the resin. Any possible dot is broken on a vibrating screen thus obtaining a dust-free material yielding a percentage of lustrous carbon corresponding to 3-3.5% of its own weight.
  • Said material is added to a molding sand in such an amount so as to have a constant lustrous carbon yield equal to 0.2-0.6%.
  • the molding sand is also enriched with a non-expandable refractory material, thus minimizing surface defects on castings due to thermal expansion problems.
  • the amount of preferably resin-based coating on the refractory material will be of 0.5 to 60% by weight and in particular more preferably 1.0 to 30% by weight.
  • a refractory material with 25% of coating consisting of a synthetic substitute of a mineral coal dust, would be able to release upon melting lustrous carbon in the percentage of 15 to 16% by weight.
  • the granulated material according to the invention further offers the advantage of improving the extracting properties of castings and obtaining better surfaces on same.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Mold Materials And Core Materials (AREA)
  • Glanulating (AREA)

Abstract

The invention refers to a granulated material for preparation of foundry molding sand, to be added to them to improve their composition, reduce pollution and handling problems, which consists of a refractory framework in the form of granules the size of which ranges from 0.1 to 0.4 mm and an external coating on said refractory framework which in turn consists of a fit material for providing lustrous carbon. The refractory framework is formed by a zircon sand, chamotte, chromite, olivine, sillimenite, mullite or mixtures thereof, with a free silice content not greater than 3 %. The invention also relates to a hot-process and a cold-process for production of said granulated material.

Description

  • The present invention relates to a granulated material comprising a refractory framework coated with a material fit for providing "lustrous carbon" and suitable for being used as additive to foundry molding sand in order to improve its properties.
  • The invention also relates to a method for the production of said granulated material as well as to the compositions of the molding sands containing such material.
  • Molding sand actually used in foundry practice for the production of molds for cast- iron castings consists of sand and clay as binder. Bentonite is especially used with advantage as binding clay.
  • In the composition of molding sands a coal dust is usually added with the main purpose of preventing formation of defects on the surface of castings. Said defects, as it is known, are prevalently due to the thermal expansion of the sand and to metal-mold material reactions such as the formation of ferrous oxide on the surface of castings which, by reaction with silica, produces low-melting point silicates responsible for surface roughness in the castings. The coal dust absorbs the thermal expansion of the sand, since during casting, when the surface temperature of the mold rises to about 1000°C, it is caused to distill releasing volatile matter and increasing the void around the expanding sand grains. Furthermore said volatile matter generates an inert atmosphere and produces "lustrous carbon" which coats the sand grains with a refractory film, not wettable by molten metal, thus avoiding the metal from reacting with the mold material.
  • "Lustrous carbon" is defined as an allotropic, optically isotropic state of the carbon having a microcrystalline, essentially bidimensional structure, intermediate between amorphous carbon and graphite. Lustrous carbon is obtained on wide specific surfaces by pirolysis of heavy hydrocarbons which are released by carbon-based materials during contact with the molten metal. Properties, characteristics and methods of analysis concerning lustrous carbon are extensively described by V. I. Bindermagel, A. Kolors, K. Orthus: Schnellverfahren zur Bestimmung der aus Formstoffzusatzen (method of analysis for mold materials additives), Giesserei, Vol. 51, 12 Nov., page 729-730 (1964).
  • Moreover, the addition of coal dust improves green and dry strength of the sand and reduces gas permeability.
  • Coal dusts which have been extensively used in the past are natural substances such as milled low-grade anthracite or pearl-pitch, characterized by a low content of ash and noxious products such as sulphur, with a lustrous carbon yield not greater than 12% of its own weight and normally lower than 10%. More recently advanced techniques for the preparation of coal dusts have introduced the use of synthetic substances yielding more than 70% of lustrous carbon, thus considerably reducing (up to 7 times) the amount of coal dust used.
  • Therefore recent practice in the preparation of molding sands (which contain 80-85% by weight of a refractory material, clay substance as binders and the above mentioned carbon-based materials) is to use both synthetic substances with a high yield of lustrous carbon and natural substances such as low-grade anthracite powders or mixtures thereof.
  • In any case the molding sands, after their use for molding, are continuously regenerated to produce new molds and are added with refractory material, clay binder and carbon-based additives at each cycle.
  • The most common refractory material used for the preparation of molding sands is silica sand because of its low cost; other types of sand, such as olivine, chamotte, chromite, zircon, sillimanite, mullite and the like can be used for particular purposes. Nevertheless it is well known that with respect to other kinds of sands, a serious drawback of silica sand consists in that it has a higher thermal expansion coefficient, which moreover increases suddenly at about 500°C in correspondence to the quartz allotropic transformation from the alpha to beta state.
  • According therefore to actual foundry practice for regenerating additions, silica sand is generally used, as well as compositions based on bentonite or binding clays as binders, low-grade anthracite powders or synthetic materials or mixtures thereof as carbon-based additives.
  • Dilatometric properties of molding sand, according to this way of working, remain nearly unchanged or tend to get worse progressively with regenerating cycles. Furthermore the actual practice is to add the additives as powders to the molding sand, especially the carbon-based ones and particularly the synthetic ones with a high lustrous carbon yield. This fact produces a serious pollution problem, a suspension of fine dust being present in the working environment, besides a further problem concerning the metering of the various additives to the exhausted sand. In this connection the addition of synthetic material with a high lustrous carbon yield was suggested by the Applicant to be carried out in form of a premixed matter together with the clay binder, thereby partly reducing handling and working problems.
  • It is the object of the invention to improve the composition of green molding sands by adding to them, during regeneration, a refractory material, characterized by a lower thermal expansion coefficient than the one of the initially used sand, which is, in other words, able to positively and progressively modify its dilatometric properties.
  • Another object of the invention is to produce quartz- and dust-free material to be used for the . preparation of molding sands, thereby reducing both pollution of the working environment and material handling problems.
  • According to the invention, a granulated material for adding to foundry molding sands for improving its properties is defined in claim 1. In particular, the refractory framework may be made with a material having a null or very low thermal expansion coefficient, such as zircon, chamotte, chromite, olivine, sillimanite or mullite sands and preferably consisting of a silicate with a content of free crystalline silica not greater than 3%.
  • In this way the addition of only one component to the foundry molding sands has the double effect of adding a coal dust and of regenerating the sand with a refractory material, thus avoiding the handling of powder-producing materials and contemporaneously adding a refractory material, during regenerative additions, which progressively improves the dilatometric properties of the refractory framework as a whole.
  • The refractory frameworkmateriai, according to the invention, is precoated with a substance fit for producing a considerable amount of lustrous carbon upon melting. As lustrous carbon producing material, organic polymers with softening temperature range of 70-180°C are generally used, such as plastics or resins of the type of polyethylene, polypropylene, coumaronic resins, polystyrene, glycerophtalic resins, petrolic resins, glysonite and pitchy substances, phenolic resins and more generally any other material fit for producing, during casting, lustrous carbon according to foundry methods in an amount ranging between 15 and 90% of its own weight.
  • A method for producing the granulated material according to the invention may comprise melting the organic material and mixing it in a hot process with the granules of refractory material.
  • Another possible method is based on the fact that said organic material is solvent-soluble and therefore can be directly added to the granules of refractory material when mixed in a drum with a solvent, in order to produce a proper resin coating on the granules by evaporating the solvent, which is recovered in a subsequent step. A person skilled in the art is well aware of how selection of the solvent, on the basis of the type of organic material used, is to be carried out. A particularly preferred solvent is white spirit.
  • The material produced according to said methods is homogeneous, granular and dust-free, each granule being coated with a layer of carbon-based material yielding a high percentage of lustrous carbon. Such homogeneous granulated material is directly used for regenerating molding sands, in place of the two separate components of refractory framework and coal dust.
  • A practical, particularly preferred application of this invention provides for the use of olivine sand, chromite sand or the like or their mixtures either with a granule size ranging between 0.1 and 0.4 mm or as a powder. The sand, or sand mixture, is heated to 150°C and then mixed with coumaronic resin; the percentage of the resin is 10% calculated on the weight of the refractory framework. After a few minutes of mixing, during which liquefied resin produces a coating on the refractory granules, the mixture is cooled and sieved to break any possible lump, thus obtaining a dust-free granulated material.
  • Practical examples concerning the production of the granulated material according to the invention will be given hereinafter.
  • Example 1
  • 900 kg of chromite sand with a particle size of 0.1-0.3 mm and a Cr203 content of 44.5% are fed to a mixing drum and heated to 160°C, then 100 kg of polystyrene in the form of granules or powder are added with the following characteristics:
    Figure imgb0001
  • After 3-4 minutes of mixing, the mixture is cooled and discharged onto a vibrating screen to obtain a granulated material with a granule size ranging between 0.1 and 0.3 mm, each granule being coated with polystyrene.
  • Said cromite sand precoated with polystyrene yields 7-8% of its own weight in lustrous carbon, the same amount being provided by a coal dust obtained from the grinding of a low-grade anthracite. Such a synthetic material can be added to a molding sand according to normal practice in the art for the addition of coal dust.
  • Example 2
  • 950 kg of olivine sand with granule size ranging between 0.06 and 0.4 mm, and the following chemical analysis:
    Figure imgb0002
    are fed to a mixing drum with 100 kg of a solution containing 50% of white spirit and 50% of petrolic resin, with the following characteristics:
    Figure imgb0003
    after a few minutes of mixing, the solvent is sucked from the mixing drum to completely coat the sand granules with the resin. Any possible dot is broken on a vibrating screen thus obtaining a dust-free material yielding a percentage of lustrous carbon corresponding to 3-3.5% of its own weight.
  • Said material is added to a molding sand in such an amount so as to have a constant lustrous carbon yield equal to 0.2-0.6%. In this way the molding sand is also enriched with a non-expandable refractory material, thus minimizing surface defects on castings due to thermal expansion problems.
  • According to the practice of the invention, the amount of preferably resin-based coating on the refractory material will be of 0.5 to 60% by weight and in particular more preferably 1.0 to 30% by weight. For example, a refractory material with 25% of coating consisting of a synthetic substitute of a mineral coal dust, would be able to release upon melting lustrous carbon in the percentage of 15 to 16% by weight.
  • In addition to the above mentioned advantages concerning dust-free handling of the material and the progressive improvement of the dilatometric properties of the initial molding sand, the granulated material according to the invention further offers the advantage of improving the extracting properties of castings and obtaining better surfaces on same.

Claims (6)

1. A granulated material for adding to foundry molding sand for improving its properties characterized in that it comprises a refractory framework in the form of granules, whose size ranges from 0.1 to 0.4 mm, and an external coating on said refractory framework, consisting of a material fit for providing, during casting operation, lustrous carbon in an amount ranging from 15 to 90% of its own weight, the amount of coating of said material on said refractory framework being 0.5 to 60% of the total weight of the granulated material.
2. The granulated material according to claim 1, in which said refractory framework consists of a material selected from zircon sand, chamotte, chromite, olivine, sillimenite, mullite, or mixtures thereof, with a free silica content not greater than 3%.
3. The granulated material according to claim 1 or 2, in which said material fit for providing lustrous carbon is a material selected from the plastics or resins polyethylene, polypropylene, coumaronic resins, polystyrene, glycerophralic resins, petrolic resins, glysonyte and pitchy substances, phtalic anidride, phenolic resins and their mixtures.
4. A method for the production of a granulated material as claimed in any of the preceding claims from 1 to 3, including the steps of: heating in a mixing drum at a temperature of 70-180°C a refractory material in the form of granules with a size range of 0.1 to 0.4 mm; feeding the mixing drum with a material fit for providing lustrous carbon in an amount of 15 to 90% of its own weight, thus producing a mixture therein; mixing the mixture so that the material fit for providing lustrous carbon coats the refractory granules; cooling the mixture, and sieving it in order to break any possible lump.
5. A method for the production of a granulated material as claimed in any of the previous claims from 1 to 3, consisting of: feeding a mixing drum with a refractory material in the form of granules with a size range of 0.1 to 0.4 mm; feeding said mixing drum with a material fit for providing lustrous carbon in an amount of 15 to 90% of its own weight, said material being dissolved in a solvent; mixing the mixture; evaporaing said solvent so as to cause the material fit for providing lustrous carbon to coat the refractory granules; and sieving said granulated material in order to break any possible lump.
6. A foundry molding sand including a granulated material as claimed in any of the claims from 1 to 3, in such an amount that the lustrous carbon yield of said molding sand is 0.2 to 0.6% of the total weight of said molding sand.
EP81830010A 1980-01-21 1981-01-21 Granulated material, and production method of same, as additive for improving properties of foundry molding sands Expired EP0032881B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AT81830010T ATE6835T1 (en) 1980-01-21 1981-01-21 GRANULATED ADDITIONAL MATERIAL FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF FOUNDRY MOLDING SAND AND ITS MANUFACTURING PROCESS.

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT8009323A IT1209745B (en) 1980-01-21 1980-01-21 GRANULAR MATERIAL FOR THE PREPARATION OF FOUNDRY FORMING LANDS AND ITS PRODUCTION PROCESS
IT932380 1980-01-21

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EP0032881A1 EP0032881A1 (en) 1981-07-29
EP0032881B1 true EP0032881B1 (en) 1984-03-28

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AT (1) ATE6835T1 (en)
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IT (1) IT1209745B (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN104646595A (en) * 2015-01-22 2015-05-27 安徽省繁昌县皖南阀门铸造有限公司 Core molding sand containing spherical quartz and preparation method of core molding sand

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE3246324C3 (en) * 1982-12-15 1994-07-14 Iko Gmbh & Co Kg Use of additives to clay bonded foundry sand
DE3305745A1 (en) * 1983-02-17 1984-08-23 Hüttenes-Albertus Chemische Werke GmbH, 4000 Düsseldorf Process for the preparation of a lustrous carbon former for foundry applications
US5355931A (en) * 1992-09-04 1994-10-18 Brunswick Corporation Method of expendable pattern casting using sand with specific thermal properties
DE10326967A1 (en) * 2003-06-12 2004-12-30 Iko Minerals Gmbh Process for producing a core and foundry sand for foundry purposes

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1458104B1 (en) * 1963-10-10 Ver Zur Foerderung Der Giesser Carbon-containing additive for foundry molding compounds
DE1952357A1 (en) * 1969-10-17 1971-04-29 Ravensberger Eisenhuette Styrene ethylene or propylene polymers - replacing carbon dust in casting mould comps
DE2313649A1 (en) * 1973-03-19 1974-10-03 Buderus Eisenwerk FOUNDRY MOLDING SAND
DE2317218A1 (en) * 1973-04-06 1974-10-17 Heinze Gerald Mould and core sand mixt. contg. a buffer - the buffer prevents sand-iron reactions and defects due to sand expansion
DE1920224B2 (en) * 1969-04-22 1975-06-12 Verein Zur Foerderung Der Giessereiindustrie, 4000 Duesseldorf Molding material made from natural or synthetic molding sands
DE2638042A1 (en) * 1975-09-17 1977-03-24 Fischer Ag Georg PROCESS FOR TREATMENT OF POROESE, GRAY BASE MATERIALS, IN PARTICULAR FOR THE PRODUCTION OF FOUNDRY SANDS
DE2716168A1 (en) * 1976-04-12 1977-10-27 Nynaes Petroleum Ab PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING CASTING FORMS OR CASTING FORM CORES AND MOLDED MATERIAL FOR USE IN THIS PROCESS FROM AN AQUATIC MIXTURE OF MOLDING SAND, BINDING AGENT, AND CARBON MATERIAL

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1458104B1 (en) * 1963-10-10 Ver Zur Foerderung Der Giesser Carbon-containing additive for foundry molding compounds
DE1920224B2 (en) * 1969-04-22 1975-06-12 Verein Zur Foerderung Der Giessereiindustrie, 4000 Duesseldorf Molding material made from natural or synthetic molding sands
DE1952357A1 (en) * 1969-10-17 1971-04-29 Ravensberger Eisenhuette Styrene ethylene or propylene polymers - replacing carbon dust in casting mould comps
DE2313649A1 (en) * 1973-03-19 1974-10-03 Buderus Eisenwerk FOUNDRY MOLDING SAND
DE2317218A1 (en) * 1973-04-06 1974-10-17 Heinze Gerald Mould and core sand mixt. contg. a buffer - the buffer prevents sand-iron reactions and defects due to sand expansion
DE2638042A1 (en) * 1975-09-17 1977-03-24 Fischer Ag Georg PROCESS FOR TREATMENT OF POROESE, GRAY BASE MATERIALS, IN PARTICULAR FOR THE PRODUCTION OF FOUNDRY SANDS
DE2716168A1 (en) * 1976-04-12 1977-10-27 Nynaes Petroleum Ab PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING CASTING FORMS OR CASTING FORM CORES AND MOLDED MATERIAL FOR USE IN THIS PROCESS FROM AN AQUATIC MIXTURE OF MOLDING SAND, BINDING AGENT, AND CARBON MATERIAL

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CN104646595A (en) * 2015-01-22 2015-05-27 安徽省繁昌县皖南阀门铸造有限公司 Core molding sand containing spherical quartz and preparation method of core molding sand

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IT1209745B (en) 1989-08-30
IT8009323A0 (en) 1980-01-21
EP0032881A1 (en) 1981-07-29
ATE6835T1 (en) 1984-04-15
DE3162845D1 (en) 1984-05-03

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