GB2092037A - Alloying and casting oxidisable metal - Google Patents

Alloying and casting oxidisable metal Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2092037A
GB2092037A GB8135041A GB8135041A GB2092037A GB 2092037 A GB2092037 A GB 2092037A GB 8135041 A GB8135041 A GB 8135041A GB 8135041 A GB8135041 A GB 8135041A GB 2092037 A GB2092037 A GB 2092037A
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chamber
alloying
casting
pouring
mold cavity
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GB8135041A
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GB2092037B (en
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PepsiAmericas Inc
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Abex Corp
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22DCASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
    • B22D1/00Treatment of fused masses in the ladle or the supply runners before casting
    • B22D1/007Treatment of the fused masses in the supply runners

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Molds, Cores, And Manufacturing Methods Thereof (AREA)
  • Refinement Of Pig-Iron, Manufacture Of Cast Iron, And Steel Manufacture Other Than In Revolving Furnaces (AREA)

Abstract

A base metal or alloy (M) in the molten state is further alloyed with readily oxidizable elements (19) in an alloying chamber (10) containing a protective atmosphere, whereupon a plugged hole (14) in the alloying chamber is opened to allow the alloy to flow into a mold (16) cavity also previously filled with a non-oxidizing atmosphere; consequently, the easily oxidized alloy is cast in the absence of atmospheric oxygen. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Foundry practices This invention relates to casting metals alloyed with appreciable amounts of readily oxidized elements, such as aluminum, titanium, zirconium, and others. The inclusion of such elements in appreciable amounts may significantly enhance the properties of a casting, particularly heat resistant properties. It may also allow the reduction of the content of such critical elements as chromium in stainless steels or heat resistant alloys. But, when the percentage is to be, say, more than one percent (by weight) it is necessary in many instances to cast in a vacuum to preclude an oxidizing atmosphere.
In the presence of oxygen, the easily oxidized element interferes with castability; it will form dross and non-metallic inclusions on the surface and trapped inside the casting which detract from the quality of the finished article and indeed may render it unacceptable as a casting likely to fail in service.
Vacuum casting is expensive and has a limit from the standpoint of casting size. If vacuum casting cannot be practiced, or if a facility is not available, then the advantage of the higher amount of the oxidizable element with regard to a number of properties of the alloy cannot be achieved.
Furthermore, when even fractions of a percent of such elements, for example, as Ti or Zr are added, the part of the alloying addition normally recovered in the casting is 70-40% of the amount added, sometimes even lower, so that excessive amounts are normally added to provide the desired residual. With the increasing cost of these materials, there is a substantial cost penalty. Additionally, difficulties in achieving the optimum content of these elements in alloys are encountered due to uncertainty in determining losses. Further, the residual content of these elements is frequently in the form of macroscopic oxide-type inclusions, in which form the element does not provide the desired improvement in properties.
One aim of the present invention is to enable appreciable amounts of a readily oxidizable element to be incorporated in a casting poured at ambient pressure under ordinary foundry conditions while effectively preventing the offending oxidizing atmosphere from contact with the pouring stream of metal and the metal inside the mold cavity. A more specific aim of the invention is to enable levels of one-half percent aluminium and upwards to be incorporated in steel or superalloy casting without resorting to vacuum melting techniques to produce a sound, acceptable casting. Yet another aim is to achieve a high recovery percentage of the added elements in the final cast product.
With these aims in view, the invention is directed to a method of casting an alloy containing one or more readily oxidizable elements by precluding atmospheric oxygen when casting and wherein alloying of the base alloy with the oxidizable element(s) takes place in an alloying chamber moments before pouring comprising:: (a) providing a mold with a casting cavity having means for venting for the escape of air contained therein and communicating with a supply passage through which a non-oxidizing gas may be admitted to the mold cavity; (b) positioning an alloying chamber adjacent to the mold cavity, the alloying chamber having a pouring opening in its bottom communicating with the mold cavity, isolating the alloying chamber from the atmosphere with a removable cover having vent passages for the escape of air and a pouring opening at its top; (c) closing the bottom pour opening of the alloying chamber with a plug to isolate the pouring chamber from the mold cavity and disposing in the pouring chamber a body of the oxidizable element;; (d) admitting the non-oxidizing gas to the mold cavity and to the pouring chamber in an amount to displace air therein and, after the air has been so displaced, pouring molten metal atop the oxidizable element in the alloying chamber, thereby creating the casting alloy in the alloying chamber; and (e) displacing the plug shortly after the oxidizable element has been alloyed with the molten metal in the alloying chamber to allow the alloyed metal to flow into the casting cavity, thereby displacing the protective atmosphere through the vent passage while concurrently preventing the intrusion of air into the casting cavity.
The invention also extends to casting apparatus and to alloys produced by the said method and apparatus.
Examples of apparatus by means of which the invention can be put into effect are shown in the accompanying drawings, in which: Figure 1 is a sectional view through one form of casting apparatus constructed in accordance with the present invention at the first moment of pouring of the base alloy from a foundry ladle; Figure 2 is a view similar to Fig. 1, showing the state of the casting apparatus at the completion of pouring from the foundry ladle; Figure 3 is a view similar to Fig. 1 and 2, showing the casting apparatus during filling of the mold cavity; Figure 4 is a view of a simplified casting apparatus wherein a protective atmosphere is applied only to the mold cavity; and Figure 5 is a schematic view showing a multiple casting apparatus employed under the present invention.
Referring to Fig. 1, the casting apparatus 5 of the present invention includes an alloying chamber 10 employed in the process.
The mixing of the base metal with a readily oxidizable alloying element takes place in the alloying chanber 10, Fig. 1. The cavity of the alloying chamber is isolated from the atmosphere using the cover 23, made of steel or ceramics. The gasket 25 is positioned between the top of the chamber and the cover 23 to effect a seal from the atmosphere. A pouring cup 22 is placed over the pouring opening 26. A non-oxidizing atmosphere is supplied to the alloying chamber at a pressure greater than ambient from the source 20. The displaced air leaves the alloying chamber through the opening 26 and the vent passage 24.
A separable plate 1 2 is secured to the bottom of the chamber and the chamber has a bottom pour opening 14 closed by a meltable plug 1 5. A separable gasket seal is positioned between the open top of mold 1 6 (sand mold) and the steel plate. The alloying chamber and the steel plate are clamped to the mold, using an anchor lug or bracket on the side of the sand mold flask F, in the manner evident from Fig. 1.
The plug 1 5 is meltable at the pouring temperature of the molten metal M. A protective atmosphere (non-oxidizing or neutral) is supplied to the mold cavity at pressure greater than ambient from a source 20 connected to the inlet of a supply passage 1 6 in one wall of the mold and the displaced air is forced from the mold cavity through vent passages 1 8 formed in the mold walls. After an oxidizable metal 1 9 has been placed on the bottom of the alloying chamber and after the protective atmosphere has been supplied to the mold cavity and to the alloying chamber, the casting apparatus is ready for pouring the molten metal M to be alloyed with the readily oxidizable metal, Fig. 1.
When the base metal is poured from the ladle 21 through the pouring cup 22 into the alloying chamber, it melts the oxidizable metal which then alloys with the metal M forming an alloy M + . Turbulence, melting of the oxidizable alloying element, and rapid diffusion of the atoms of the alloying element in the molten base metal which is at relatively high temperature assures homogeneous distribution and alloying of the oxidizable element in the base alloy. The expanding protective gas leaves the alloying chamber through the passage 24. In the meantime, the plug has been temporarily holding the melt in the chamber (Fig. 2).Any incidental oxidation which might occur in the few seconds of mixing the solid addition element and the molten metal M will float as slag S (Fig. 2) to the top of the molten metal pool in the chamber and will, of course, be the last to flow out of the chamber becoming, at the worst, a dross in the downsprue, runner or riser to be separated from the casting. In time the plug itself melts (Fig.
3). As the first portion of the molten metal pours by gravity into the mold cavity through the mold opening, and as the temperature inside the mold cavity rapidly increases, the expanded protective atmosphere is displaced rapidly through the vent passages 1 8 (Fig. 3). This process is further accelerated by the incoming molten metal which eventually blocks the vent passages, as shown in Fig. 3.
Thus, until the last portions of the molten M + leave the alloying chamber, there is no contact between the interior of the mold cavity and the ambient atmosphere in the foundry. Air can only enter the mold cavity after the molten metal has completely flowed from the alloying chamber and filled the mold cavity and is, therefore, harmless with respect to casting quality.
Castings produced in accordance with the present invention with aluminum as the oxidizable element exhibit a uniform distribution of aluminum in the casting. The castings exhibit exceptionally good surface appearance, characterized by a surface free of defect-causing oxides compared to castings of the same alloy but with only 2-3 percent aluminum cast in the ordinary fashion in which the foundrymen would anticipate drossy surfaces containing many oxide film folds and other oxide-related defects.
Example Using the aparatus and process herein described, a cast, heat-resistant alloy heat treating tray was produced as follows.
110 pounds of a base alloy A of the composition shown in Table I was prepared in an induction melting furnace using routine foundry practices. An oil-bonded silica sand mold was prepared by conventional molding practice, but equipped with vents according to this new process.
The aparatus described earlier was equipped with a meltable disc plug of 1020 steel, 0.27 inches thick and 3i inches in diameter. Six pounds of aluminum alloy #356 of the composition shown in Table I was separately melted, poured into the alloying chamber, and allowed to solidify in place on top of the steel plug. As can be seen, this weight of aluminum alloy comprises about 5.2% of the total metal to be cast into the mold cavity, and the contained aluminum represents approximately 4.8%.
The alloy chamber was covered as described earlier, and the apparatus was flushed with a volume of argon gas (ten times the volume of the mold cavity) to eliminate ambient air from both the alloying chamber and the mold cavity.
After this period of flushing of the alloy chamber and mold cavity, 110 Ibs. of the base alloy A were tapped into a foundry lip-pour ladle and subsequently poured at a temperature of 2900 F into the alloy chamber through the top pouring opening of the alloying chamber by means of the pouring cup.
Seven seconds after the end of the pour, the steel plug melted and the new, aluminumcontaining composition poured into the oxygen-free mold cavity through the bottom pour opening of the alloying chamber.
The casting was allowed to solidify and, after cooling, was removed from the sand and cleaned according to conventional foundry practice. By subsequent analysis, the casting was found to contain 4.8% of aluminum, essentially 100% recovery of the aluminum added.
Contrary to the expectation of those familiar with the effect of aluminum on casting quality, the surface of the cast tray with 4.8% aluminum was totally free of dross or "oxide fold" type defects and was judged, in fact, superior to a conventional casting free of all but the traces of aluminum conventionally used for deoxidation.
Table 1 Basic Composition of Alloys in Example C% Cr% Ni% Fe% Al% Si% Mg% Alloy A 0.40 10.0 20.0 Bal. - - 356 - - - - 92 (min) 7.0 0.3 As will be understood by those skilled in the art, the invention need not be restricted to the specific embodiment described. For example, the base alloys to be alloyed with the readily oxidized metal need not be restricted to ferrous metals, providing the oxidizable constituent can be provided at a melting point appropriate to the process.
Similarly, the preferred meltable plug may be replaced by a mechanically removable nonmelting plug of metal, refractory, ceramic, graphite, or other material appropriate to the particulars of the process.
The protective atmosphere may be nitrogen or other non-oxidizing gas. The oxidizable element, such as aluminum, can be put into the bottom of the alloy chamber as a uniform layer of small, solid pieces (Fig. 1). Alternatively, aluminum may be separately melted, poured into the bottom of the alloying chamber, and allowed to solidify in place. Elements, such as titanium, which in themselves, have rather high melting points can be distributed in the bottom of the alloying chamber as prepared alloys selected for high content of the aforementioned element, together with a melting temperature appropriately lower than the melting temperature of the base alloy. Limitless alloy combinations of the readily oxidizable elements can be acheived by preparing particulate or powder metal compacts to be distributed in the bottom of the alloying chamber.
Examples of useful alloys for achieving a reduction in the melting point of titanium, for example, are the eutectic alloys 72%Ti-28%Ni and 68%Ti-32%Fe with melting points of 943 C and 1086"C respectively; far below the typical liquidus temperature of, for example, an iron base, 25%Cr, 20%Ni, 0.40%C, base alloy to be alloyed with titanium, i.e. approximately 1400"C.
The oil-bonded silica sand mold cavity may be replaced by molds manufactured by any of a large number of common mold-forming processes and materials, as well as by properly vented permanent molds. The invention equally applies to the production of centrifugally cast articles where permanent molds are used.
In some cases, when the amount of the addition of an oxidizable element is not high or when the amount of non-metallic inclusions in a casting is not critical to its performance, successful results can be achieved without applying the protective atmosphere into the alloying chamber.
The modification of the casting apparatus in these cases is shown in Fig. 4.
If several molds are poured from a single ladle by conventional foundry procedure, the oxidizable element is added into the ladle and the concentration of the oxidizable element decreases from casting to casting, and the excessive slag formation causes serious problems.
Though castings made according to this invention contain readily oxidizable elements, metal being melted, tapped into the ladle and held in the ladle does not contain any readily oxidizable elements, other than very low amounts used for conventional deoxidation. Therefore, many molds can be poured from a single pouring or holding ladle, Fig. 5, without danger of losing readily oxidizable elements into the ladle slag during the time required to pour several molds.

Claims (11)

1. A method of casting an alloy containing one or more readily oxidizable elements by precluding atmospheric oxygen when casting and wherein alloying of the base alloy with rihe oxidizable element(s) takes place in an alloying chamber moments before pouring comprising: (a) providing a mold with a casting cavity having means for venting for the escape of air contained therein and communicating with a supply passage through which a non-oxidizing gas may be admitted to the mold cavity; (b) positioning an alloying chamber adjacent to the mold cavity, the alloying chamber having a pouring opening in its bottom communicating with the mold cavity, isolating the alloying chamber from the atmosphere with a removable cover having vent passages for the escape of air and a pouring opening at its top;; (c) closing the bottom pour opening of the alloying chamber with a plug to isolate the pouring chamber from the mold cavity and disposing in the pouring chamber a body of the oxidizable element; (d) admitting the non-oxidizing gas to the mold cavity and to the pouring chamber in an amount to displace air therein and, after the air has been so displaced, pouring mcten metal atop the oxidizable element in the alloying chamber, thereby creating the casting alloy in the alloying chamber; and (e) displacing the plug shortly after the oxidizable element has been alloyed with the my'ten metal in the alloying chamber to allow the alloyed metal to flow into the casting cavity thereby displacing the protective atmosphere through the vent passage while concurrently preventing the intrusion of air into the casting cavity.
2. A method according to claim 1, in which the plug is meltable by the molten metal.
3. A method according to claim 1 or claim 2, in which the readily oxidizable metal is first melted and poured in the alloying chamber atop the plug to solidify therein before the molten metal is poured.
4. Casting apparatus for incorporating a readily oxidizable element in a molten metal to alloy therewith, comprising: (a) a mold having walls presenting a mold cavity and formed with a supply passage and at least one vent passage, each communicating with the mold cavity; (b) an alloying chamber removably set adjacent to and communicating with the mold cavity to receive, through a top pouring opening, molten metal onto the readily oxidizable metal residing in the chamber, said chamber having a bottom pour opening for communicating with .he mold cavity; (c) said alloying chamber being isolated from the atmosphere by a removable cover, having a top pouring opening, and said alloying chamber having a gas supply passage and vent passages;; (d) means providing a source of non-oxidizing gas connected to said supply passages so that by admitting the non-oxidizing gas to the mold cavity and the alloying chamber cavity, air '%'iil be displaced therefrom to render the cavities free of atmosphereic oxygen; (e) a displacable plug in said bottom pour opening to separate the alloying chamber and the mold cavity; and (f) seal means bletv?reen the bottom of the alloying chamber and the top of the mold cavity to preclude the surrounding oxygen-containing atmosphere.
5. Casting apparatus acckording to claim 4, in which the plug is a metal plug meltable by the molten metal poured into the chamber.
6. Casting apparatus according to claim 4 or claim 5, in which the mold is a sand ,.eld and in which the alloying chamber is a metal support lined with a refractory.
7. Casting apparatus according to claim 4, in which the mold is a centrifugal mold for the production of centrifugally cast articles;
8. Casting apparatus according to claim 4 or claim 5, in which the alloying chamber is spen at the top and does not contain a protective atmosphere;
9. A method of pouring several molds with an alloy containing easily oxidizee elements, in which metal in a holding or pouring ladle does not contain readily oxidizable elements and employing the casting method of claim 1 for pouring of each mold.
1 0. A method of casting an alloy according to claim 1 substantially as described herein eith reference to Figs. 1-3, Fig. 4 or Fig. 5 of the accompanying drawings.
11. Casting apparatus according to claim 4 subs,antially as described herein -42h refeFeilCe to Figs. 1-3, Fig. 4 or Fig. 5 of the accompanying drawings.
1 2. An alloy produced by a method as claimed in any one of claims 1-3, claim 9 or claim 10, or by apparatus as claimed in any one of claims 4-8 or claim 11.
GB8135041A 1981-02-02 1981-11-20 Alloying and casting oxidisable metal Expired GB2092037B (en)

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US23061481A 1981-02-02 1981-02-02

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GB2092037A true GB2092037A (en) 1982-08-11
GB2092037B GB2092037B (en) 1985-06-12

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JP (1) JPS57134260A (en)
CA (1) CA1178014A (en)
DE (1) DE3200104C2 (en)
GB (1) GB2092037B (en)
MX (1) MX156442A (en)
ZA (1) ZA817750B (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0104392A1 (en) * 1982-08-26 1984-04-04 Franco Zanardi Method of producing nodular iron and a machine for the implementation thereof
FR2578459A1 (en) * 1985-03-05 1986-09-12 Fischer Ag Georg METHOD AND DEVICE FOR MANUFACTURING SPHEROIDAL GRAPHITE CAST IRON OR VERMICULAR GRAPHITE CAST IRON IN A MOLD
US5299619A (en) * 1992-12-30 1994-04-05 Hitchiner Manufacturing Co., Inc. Method and apparatus for making intermetallic castings
US5404929A (en) * 1993-05-18 1995-04-11 Liquid Air Corporation Casting of high oxygen-affinity metals and their alloys
US8403187B2 (en) 2006-09-27 2013-03-26 Air Liquide Industrial U.S. Lp Production of an inert blanket in a furnace
US8568654B2 (en) 2006-08-23 2013-10-29 Air Liquide Industrial U.S. Lp Vapor-reinforced expanding volume of gas to minimize the contamination of products treated in a melting furnace
CN114273644A (en) * 2021-12-20 2022-04-05 贵州航天风华精密设备有限公司 Gas protection forming method in rare earth magnesium alloy casting cavity

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE102008043313B4 (en) * 2008-10-30 2011-01-27 Federal-Mogul Nürnberg GmbH Casting mold and casting device with a casting mold

Family Cites Families (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1013851A (en) * 1963-01-31 1965-12-22 Ass Elect Ind Improvements in and relating to the production of metal castings

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0104392A1 (en) * 1982-08-26 1984-04-04 Franco Zanardi Method of producing nodular iron and a machine for the implementation thereof
FR2578459A1 (en) * 1985-03-05 1986-09-12 Fischer Ag Georg METHOD AND DEVICE FOR MANUFACTURING SPHEROIDAL GRAPHITE CAST IRON OR VERMICULAR GRAPHITE CAST IRON IN A MOLD
US5299619A (en) * 1992-12-30 1994-04-05 Hitchiner Manufacturing Co., Inc. Method and apparatus for making intermetallic castings
US5404929A (en) * 1993-05-18 1995-04-11 Liquid Air Corporation Casting of high oxygen-affinity metals and their alloys
US8568654B2 (en) 2006-08-23 2013-10-29 Air Liquide Industrial U.S. Lp Vapor-reinforced expanding volume of gas to minimize the contamination of products treated in a melting furnace
US9267187B2 (en) 2006-08-23 2016-02-23 Air Liquide Industrial U.S. Lp Vapor-reinforced expanding volume of gas to minimize the contamination of products treated in a melting furnace
US8403187B2 (en) 2006-09-27 2013-03-26 Air Liquide Industrial U.S. Lp Production of an inert blanket in a furnace
CN114273644A (en) * 2021-12-20 2022-04-05 贵州航天风华精密设备有限公司 Gas protection forming method in rare earth magnesium alloy casting cavity

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Publication number Publication date
JPS57134260A (en) 1982-08-19
DE3200104A1 (en) 1982-12-09
CA1178014A (en) 1984-11-20
DE3200104C2 (en) 1985-07-04
ZA817750B (en) 1982-11-24
MX156442A (en) 1988-08-23
GB2092037B (en) 1985-06-12

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