US20040182482A1 - DC cast Al alloy - Google Patents

DC cast Al alloy Download PDF

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US20040182482A1
US20040182482A1 US10/471,437 US47143704A US2004182482A1 US 20040182482 A1 US20040182482 A1 US 20040182482A1 US 47143704 A US47143704 A US 47143704A US 2004182482 A1 US2004182482 A1 US 2004182482A1
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alloy
heating
present
interannealing
ingot
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Alan Gray
Andrew Howells
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Rio Tinto Alcan International Ltd
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Alcan International Ltd Canada
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C21/00Alloys based on aluminium
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22FCHANGING THE PHYSICAL STRUCTURE OF NON-FERROUS METALS AND NON-FERROUS ALLOYS
    • C22F1/00Changing the physical structure of non-ferrous metals or alloys by heat treatment or by hot or cold working
    • C22F1/04Changing the physical structure of non-ferrous metals or alloys by heat treatment or by hot or cold working of aluminium or alloys based thereon

Definitions

  • This invention relates to an aluminium alloy, particularly one which has been DC cast and is used for finstock in heat exchangers.
  • the automotive heat exchanger market requires finstock alloys that offer, at low cost, a balance of physical and chemical properties, i.e. strength, formability, sag resistance, corrosion resistance, thermal conductivity and brazeability.
  • Aluminium alloy heat exchangers provided with header plates, tank units, tubes for coolant (water based) and fins for improved heat exchange, are very widely used in the automobile industry and elsewhere.
  • the fins are joined to the tubes by brazing.
  • WO-A-00/05426 discloses a high conductivity aluminium fin alloy.
  • the invention disclosed therein relates to continuous strip casting of an AI alloy, where the finstock has a conductivity after brazing of greater than 49.0% IACS. During continuous casting a thin strip is produced which cools quickly.
  • Al—Fe—Si alloys are disclosed in, for example, the following documents: GB 1524355, GB 1524354, WO-A-00/05426, JP-A-2000169926, JP-A-080218143, JP-A-060145861, JP-A-040154931, JP-A-010195257.
  • the compositions of the alloys exemplified in these documents varies, but there is no disclosure of DC cast alloys.
  • a DC cast alloy of composition (in wt %): Fe 0.8-1.5 Si 0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti ⁇ 0.1 B ⁇ 0.01 C ⁇ 0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance.
  • the alloy could, for example, be used in header plate, or side support applications, and may have other uses, but it is primarily intended as a finstock alloy for heat exchangers.
  • Cu is present in the range 0.05-0.2, even more preferably 0.1-0.15.
  • Cu is included as a solid solution strengthening component.
  • Mg is preferably present as a strengthening component. At high concentrations, an undesired MgO deposit is formed on the metal surface during brazing. The Mg concentration is controlled at levels where this is not a problem. Higher levels of Mg will, in the presence of K 3 AlF 6 and KAlF 4 flux mixtures, lead to the formation of high melting point aluminium fluorides which have a deleterious effect on clad fluidity. Preferably, Mg is present in the range 0.05-0.2, even more preferably 0.1-0.15.
  • Fe is preferably present in the range 0.8-1.4, although an even more preferred upper limit of the range is 1.35. Higher levels cause the formation of excessively large intermetallic particles.
  • Si above the upper limit of 0.95% reduces the solidus of the alloy to below 610° C. which is unacceptable as it is too close to the brazing temperature.
  • the lower limit is determined by the amount of Si necessary to achieve the required post braze strength.
  • Mn if present in amounts more than 0.5% has a deleterious effect on the thermal conductivity. Below 0.2% Mn there is insufficient strengthening effect.
  • Zn is added to make the finstock more electro-negative than, and sacrificial to, the tube material of the heat exchanger. Above 0.8% Zn, the fin becomes too electro-negative. Such high levels of Zn are detrimental to the thermal conductivity of the fin. Below 0.2% Zn, the fin is not sufficiently electro-negative to be sacrificial. The preferred range is 0.5 to 0.7% Zn.
  • a DC cast aluminium alloy finstock having a composition (in wt %): Fe 0.8-1.5 Si 0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti ⁇ 0.1 B ⁇ 0.01 C ⁇ 0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance.
  • the finstock sheet may be clad with a layer of aluminium alloy that is rich in silicon. Suitable alloys are AA4343 and M4045 although other silicon rich alloys may be used.
  • the silicon rich layer may optionally contain additions such as Zn or Sn or In that render the fin more electronegative.
  • This finstock may have the above-mentioned preferable or optional features.
  • the finstock has a conductivity after brazing of at least 45% IACS.
  • aluminium alloys of this invention are DC cast, and the reasons for this are described in further detail below.
  • brazed heat exchanger having fins of the above-mentioned alloy.
  • a method of producing an ingot from an alloy of composition (in wt %): Fe 0.8-1.5 Si 0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti ⁇ 0.1 B ⁇ 0.01 C ⁇ 0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance, which method comprises DC casting the alloy to form an ingot.
  • the present invention is therefore aimed at producing the ingot by conventional DC casting, thereby avoiding the need for continuous casting (for example belt casting or twin roll casting).
  • DC casting produces a thick ingot that cools slowly during solidification.
  • Continuous casting produces a thin, 3-20 mm strip that cools quickly.
  • the difference in cooling rate has a profound effect on the metallurgical structure of the cast product. These differences remain even after processing the ingot down to very thin gauge foil.
  • the process of the present invention produces a material that has properties comparable to those of continuous cast material.
  • the control of the particle size of the DC cast material is important in obtaining these properties.
  • the cooling rate is approximately 1-5° C. per second depending on the ingot thickness.
  • Finstock derived from the alloy should have high thermal conductivity after brazing (which typically occurs at 595° C. to 605° C. for times of about 2-10 minutes) combined with good strength (UTS) and corrosion potential.
  • thermal conductivity is usually implied by measuring the electrical conductivity. Both are reduced by elements in solution so there is a need to reduce the amount of soluble elements going into solution during brazing. This is achieved by controlling the particle size of the intermetallics and the dispersoids in the rolled sheet and the chemical composition of the sheet.
  • the high strength achieved by the DC cast material allows downgauging, to below 100 ⁇ m, for example below 75 ⁇ m, thus providing the ability to achieve new and improved lightweight fins. Additionally, the composition of the alloy has been chosen to maximise the absorption of brazing sheet scrap to ensure a low-cost production route, and maximise recyclability.
  • the method further comprises the steps of heating or homogenising the DC cast ingot, hot rolling, cold rolling, and (inter)annealing, and may further comprise the step of cold rolling after the interannealing step.
  • the final thickness reduction during cold rolling is preferably between 25 and 45%.
  • the homogenising step may be a two-stage homogenisation comprising heating the ingot to 580-620° C., holding for up to 8 hours, cooling to 460-500° C. and holding for up to 8 hours.
  • the heating step may be a simple heat to roll step comprising heating to 460-540° C., and holding for up to 8 hours.
  • This simple heat to roll step is not sufficient to bring about complete homogenisation of the ingot. It is intended to bring the ingot to a uniform temperature to facilitate hot rolling.
  • the hot rolling is preferably performed to 2.5 to 5.0 mm, with an exit temperature from the hot mill of typically 280-360° C. Where an interannealing step is present, subsequent cold rolling to 50-700 ⁇ m is preferred. Cold rolling to final gauge without an intermediate anneal is followed by a final anneal.
  • the (inter)annealing step may be a single stage process at 250-450° C., preferably holding at this temperature for 2 to 4 hours. Alternatively, it may be a two-stage process comprising heating at 300-500° C. (preferably holding for up to 4 hours) and subsequently cooling to 200-350° C. (preferably holding for up to 4 hours).
  • annealing may be carried out in a continuous annealing furnace with the strip being fed through as a single strand to greatly increase the heating rates and reduce the holding times required. Higher annealing temperatures and shorter annealing times may thus be achieved.
  • the method may further comprise the step of brazing, wherein the particle size of the intermetallics and/or dispersoids present in the rolled product is sufficiently large such that the reduction in IACS is less than 5% units during brazing.
  • small (sub-micron) dispersoids dissolve readily and increase the solute level. Rapid cooling after brazing retains substantially all of the solute in solution and this reduces the IACS value and the thermal conductivity.
  • Increasing the mean dispersoid size reduces the amount dissolved during the brazing cycle and hence reduces the reduction in IACS and thermal conductivity.
  • Dispersoid size is increased by using special homogenising and/or annealing treatments that coarsen the alpha AI(Fe, Mn)Si dispersoids and probably also coarsen some of the intermetallic particles.
  • the homogenising treatment preferably comprises consecutive treatments at two temperatures, a first high temperature treatment followed by a lower temperature treatment. Annealing treatments may follow the same pattern.
  • the dispersoids present in the sheet generally have a mean size substantially below one micron (as determined by the mean linear intercept method).
  • the special homogenising and annealing treatments increase the mean dispersoids size, for example to greater than 0.5 microns preferably greater than 1 ⁇ m and ideally greater than 2 ⁇ m but less than 10 ⁇ m. Thermodynamic calculations reveal that these particles are unlikely to transform during the brazing cycle.
  • the intermetallic particles (containing Fe Mn and Si together with other elements) are substantially larger than the dispersoids; their size is determined during solidification and possible break up during rolling.
  • an aluminium alloy finstock from an alloy comprising (in wt %): Fe 0.8-1.5 Si 0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti ⁇ 0.1 B ⁇ 0.01 C ⁇ 0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance, which method comprises DC casting the alloy, heating or homogenising, hot rolling, cold rolling, and annealing or interannealing.
  • FIG. 1 is a flow diagram showing various processes of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a graph showing post-brazed strength trends
  • FIG. 3 is a graph showing corrosion potential trends (the left hand column of each pair relates to interannealed, and the right hand column relates to back annealed, i.e. annealed after cold rolling to final gauge);
  • FIG. 4 is a graph showing post-brazed mechanical properties
  • FIG. 5 is a graph showing corrosion potentials
  • FIG. 6 is a graph showing the relationship between post-brazed UTS and grain size.
  • FIG. 1 there is shown various treatments of the DC ingot covered by the present invention, including the preferred conditions of each step.
  • One ingot (route 1, FIG. 1) was heated to 520° C. and held for about 4 hrs before hot rolling to 3.0 mm, with an exit temperature of approximately 325° C.
  • the coil was then cold rolled to a transfer gauge of 400 ⁇ m and then cold rolled to a gauge of 95 ⁇ m, interannealed at 270° C. for 2 hours at temperature, and further cold rolled to a final gauge of 63 ⁇ m (final reduction of about 34%).
  • material at transfer gauge was cold rolled directly to 63 ⁇ m and given a partial anneal (back anneal) at temperatures between 200 and 400° C.
  • Corrosion potential trends are shown in FIG. 3—back annealed route.
  • Corrosion potentials are shown in FIG. 5 and are largely unaffected by interanneal gauge.
  • Conductivity is about 45% IACS.
  • Interanneal gauge is varied to maximise post-brazed grain size which benefits sag resistance during the braze cycle. For example, the thicker the interanneal gauge the smaller the grain size after brazing. Furthermore, the aspect ratio of the grains (length in the cold working direction to the thickness direction) increases as the interanneal gauge is reduced.
  • Material produced according to the composition noted in Example 1 was taken and heated to 460° C. and held for approximately 4 hours before hot rolling to 3.0 mm gauge. The coil was then cold rolled to a transfer gauge of 400 ⁇ m and subsequently cold rolled and interannealed at 360° C., to a final gauge of 63 ⁇ m. The final pass reductions were in the range 45 to 25%.
  • FIG. 6 shows the relationship between post-brazed UTS and grain size.
  • the average grain size needs to be less than 50 ⁇ m. However, reducing the post-brazed grain size does reduce the sag resistance of the material.
  • a balance between post-brazed grain size, UTS and sag resistance can be achieved by selecting specific combinations of:

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
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Abstract

There is disclosed a DC cast alloy of composition (in wt %): Fe 0.8-1.5 Si 0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti<0.1 B<0.01 C<0.01. Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total AI balance. Also disclosed is a method of DC casting the alloy to form an ingot.

Description

  • This invention relates to an aluminium alloy, particularly one which has been DC cast and is used for finstock in heat exchangers. [0001]
  • The automotive heat exchanger market requires finstock alloys that offer, at low cost, a balance of physical and chemical properties, i.e. strength, formability, sag resistance, corrosion resistance, thermal conductivity and brazeability. [0002]
  • Aluminium alloy heat exchangers, provided with header plates, tank units, tubes for coolant (water based) and fins for improved heat exchange, are very widely used in the automobile industry and elsewhere. Generally the fins are joined to the tubes by brazing. In order to reduce corrosion of the tubes with consequent leakage of coolant, it has been common practice to make the fins electronegative relative to the tubes so that the fins act as sacrificial anodes. This has been achieved by adding Zn, Sn or In to the metal used to form the fins. [0003]
  • Nevertheless, there is a need to balance the sacrificial effect with the need to maintain thermal performance throughout the service life of the heat exchanger. If fins corrode too rapidly, the heat transfer characteristics are severely compromised. Additionally, use of a higher strength fin material in a particular construction can offer the opportunity to downgauge the fin and/or the tube material to achieve lower weight targets. The use of continuously cast materials can, because of the very high solidification rates (>10° C./sec), be utilised to achieve the higher conductivity levels required when downgauging. [0004]
  • WO-A-00/05426 discloses a high conductivity aluminium fin alloy. The invention disclosed therein relates to continuous strip casting of an AI alloy, where the finstock has a conductivity after brazing of greater than 49.0% IACS. During continuous casting a thin strip is produced which cools quickly. [0005]
  • Al—Fe—Si alloys are disclosed in, for example, the following documents: GB 1524355, GB 1524354, WO-A-00/05426, JP-A-2000169926, JP-A-080218143, JP-A-060145861, JP-A-040154931, JP-A-010195257. The compositions of the alloys exemplified in these documents varies, but there is no disclosure of DC cast alloys. [0006]
  • According to a first aspect of the present invention, there is provided a DC cast alloy of composition (in wt %): [0007]
    Fe 0.8-1.5
    Si  0.7-0.95
    Mn 0.2-0.5
    Zn 0.2-0.8
    Mg up to 0.2
    Cu up to 0.2
    Ti <0.1
    B <0.01
    C <0.01
    Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total
    Al balance.
  • The alloy could, for example, be used in header plate, or side support applications, and may have other uses, but it is primarily intended as a finstock alloy for heat exchangers. [0008]
  • Preferably, Cu is present in the range 0.05-0.2, even more preferably 0.1-0.15. When present, Cu is included as a solid solution strengthening component. [0009]
  • Mg is preferably present as a strengthening component. At high concentrations, an undesired MgO deposit is formed on the metal surface during brazing. The Mg concentration is controlled at levels where this is not a problem. Higher levels of Mg will, in the presence of K[0010] 3AlF6 and KAlF4 flux mixtures, lead to the formation of high melting point aluminium fluorides which have a deleterious effect on clad fluidity. Preferably, Mg is present in the range 0.05-0.2, even more preferably 0.1-0.15.
  • The strengthening effect of the Cu and Mg has to be balanced against the reduction of thermal conductivity caused by these elements. [0011]
  • Fe is preferably present in the range 0.8-1.4, although an even more preferred upper limit of the range is 1.35. Higher levels cause the formation of excessively large intermetallic particles. [0012]
  • Si above the upper limit of 0.95% reduces the solidus of the alloy to below 610° C. which is unacceptable as it is too close to the brazing temperature. The lower limit is determined by the amount of Si necessary to achieve the required post braze strength. [0013]
  • Mn if present in amounts more than 0.5% has a deleterious effect on the thermal conductivity. Below 0.2% Mn there is insufficient strengthening effect. [0014]
  • Zn is added to make the finstock more electro-negative than, and sacrificial to, the tube material of the heat exchanger. Above 0.8% Zn, the fin becomes too electro-negative. Such high levels of Zn are detrimental to the thermal conductivity of the fin. Below 0.2% Zn, the fin is not sufficiently electro-negative to be sacrificial. The preferred range is 0.5 to 0.7% Zn. [0015]
  • According to a second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a DC cast aluminium alloy finstock having a composition (in wt %): [0016]
    Fe 0.8-1.5
    Si  0.7-0.95
    Mn 0.2-0.5
    Zn 0.2-0.8
    Mg up to 0.2
    Cu up to 0.2
    Ti <0.1
    B <0.01
    C <0.01
    Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total
    Al balance.
  • The finstock sheet may be clad with a layer of aluminium alloy that is rich in silicon. Suitable alloys are AA4343 and M4045 although other silicon rich alloys may be used. The silicon rich layer may optionally contain additions such as Zn or Sn or In that render the fin more electronegative. [0017]
  • This finstock may have the above-mentioned preferable or optional features. Preferably the finstock has a conductivity after brazing of at least 45% IACS. [0018]
  • The aluminium alloys of this invention are DC cast, and the reasons for this are described in further detail below. [0019]
  • There is also provided a brazed heat exchanger having fins of the above-mentioned alloy. [0020]
  • According to a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of producing an ingot from an alloy of composition (in wt %): [0021]
    Fe 0.8-1.5
    Si  0.7-0.95
    Mn 0.2-0.5
    Zn 0.2-0.8
    Mg up to 0.2
    Cu up to 0.2
    Ti <0.1
    B <0.01
    C <0.01
    Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total
    Al balance,
    which method comprises DC casting the alloy to form an ingot.
  • In this aspect, the present invention is therefore aimed at producing the ingot by conventional DC casting, thereby avoiding the need for continuous casting (for example belt casting or twin roll casting). DC casting produces a thick ingot that cools slowly during solidification. Continuous casting produces a thin, 3-20 mm strip that cools quickly. The difference in cooling rate has a profound effect on the metallurgical structure of the cast product. These differences remain even after processing the ingot down to very thin gauge foil. By including DC casting, the process of the present invention produces a material that has properties comparable to those of continuous cast material. The control of the particle size of the DC cast material is important in obtaining these properties. In DC cast products, the cooling rate is approximately 1-5° C. per second depending on the ingot thickness. Finstock derived from the alloy should have high thermal conductivity after brazing (which typically occurs at 595° C. to 605° C. for times of about 2-10 minutes) combined with good strength (UTS) and corrosion potential. For ease of measurement, the thermal conductivity is usually implied by measuring the electrical conductivity. Both are reduced by elements in solution so there is a need to reduce the amount of soluble elements going into solution during brazing. This is achieved by controlling the particle size of the intermetallics and the dispersoids in the rolled sheet and the chemical composition of the sheet. [0022]
  • The high strength achieved by the DC cast material allows downgauging, to below 100 μm, for example below 75 μm, thus providing the ability to achieve new and improved lightweight fins. Additionally, the composition of the alloy has been chosen to maximise the absorption of brazing sheet scrap to ensure a low-cost production route, and maximise recyclability. [0023]
  • Preferably, the method further comprises the steps of heating or homogenising the DC cast ingot, hot rolling, cold rolling, and (inter)annealing, and may further comprise the step of cold rolling after the interannealing step. The final thickness reduction during cold rolling is preferably between 25 and 45%. [0024]
  • The homogenising step may be a two-stage homogenisation comprising heating the ingot to 580-620° C., holding for up to 8 hours, cooling to 460-500° C. and holding for up to 8 hours. [0025]
  • Alternatively, the heating step may be a simple heat to roll step comprising heating to 460-540° C., and holding for up to 8 hours. This simple heat to roll step is not sufficient to bring about complete homogenisation of the ingot. It is intended to bring the ingot to a uniform temperature to facilitate hot rolling. [0026]
  • The hot rolling is preferably performed to 2.5 to 5.0 mm, with an exit temperature from the hot mill of typically 280-360° C. Where an interannealing step is present, subsequent cold rolling to 50-700 μm is preferred. Cold rolling to final gauge without an intermediate anneal is followed by a final anneal. [0027]
  • The (inter)annealing step may be a single stage process at 250-450° C., preferably holding at this temperature for 2 to 4 hours. Alternatively, it may be a two-stage process comprising heating at 300-500° C. (preferably holding for up to 4 hours) and subsequently cooling to 200-350° C. (preferably holding for up to 4 hours). [0028]
  • Alternatively, annealing may be carried out in a continuous annealing furnace with the strip being fed through as a single strand to greatly increase the heating rates and reduce the holding times required. Higher annealing temperatures and shorter annealing times may thus be achieved. [0029]
  • The method may further comprise the step of brazing, wherein the particle size of the intermetallics and/or dispersoids present in the rolled product is sufficiently large such that the reduction in IACS is less than 5% units during brazing. [0030]
  • During the brazing cycle, small (sub-micron) dispersoids dissolve readily and increase the solute level. Rapid cooling after brazing retains substantially all of the solute in solution and this reduces the IACS value and the thermal conductivity. Increasing the mean dispersoid size reduces the amount dissolved during the brazing cycle and hence reduces the reduction in IACS and thermal conductivity. Dispersoid size is increased by using special homogenising and/or annealing treatments that coarsen the alpha AI(Fe, Mn)Si dispersoids and probably also coarsen some of the intermetallic particles. The homogenising treatment preferably comprises consecutive treatments at two temperatures, a first high temperature treatment followed by a lower temperature treatment. Annealing treatments may follow the same pattern. [0031]
  • In the absence of these special homogenising or annealing treatments, the dispersoids present in the sheet generally have a mean size substantially below one micron (as determined by the mean linear intercept method). The special homogenising and annealing treatments increase the mean dispersoids size, for example to greater than 0.5 microns preferably greater than 1 μm and ideally greater than 2 μm but less than 10 μm. Thermodynamic calculations reveal that these particles are unlikely to transform during the brazing cycle. [0032]
  • The intermetallic particles (containing Fe Mn and Si together with other elements) are substantially larger than the dispersoids; their size is determined during solidification and possible break up during rolling. [0033]
  • According to a further aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of producing an aluminium alloy finstock from an alloy comprising (in wt %): [0034]
    Fe 0.8-1.5
    Si  0.7-0.95
    Mn 0.2-0.5
    Zn 0.2-0.8
    Mg up to 0.2
    Cu up to 0.2
    Ti <0.1
    B <0.01
    C <0.01
    Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total
    Al balance,
    which method comprises DC casting the alloy, heating or homogenising,
    hot rolling, cold rolling, and annealing or interannealing.
  • The invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the following figures and examples, and in which: [0035]
  • FIG. 1 is a flow diagram showing various processes of the present invention; [0036]
  • FIG. 2 is a graph showing post-brazed strength trends; [0037]
  • FIG. 3 is a graph showing corrosion potential trends (the left hand column of each pair relates to interannealed, and the right hand column relates to back annealed, i.e. annealed after cold rolling to final gauge); [0038]
  • FIG. 4 is a graph showing post-brazed mechanical properties; [0039]
  • FIG. 5 is a graph showing corrosion potentials; and [0040]
  • FIG. 6 is a graph showing the relationship between post-brazed UTS and grain size.[0041]
  • Referring to FIG. 1, there is shown various treatments of the DC ingot covered by the present invention, including the preferred conditions of each step. [0042]
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • Ingots approximately 1350 mm×600 mm and weighing in excess of 7500 kg were DC cast with the following composition: [0043]
    Si Fe Mn Cu Mg Zn Ti B
    0.85 1.25 0.45 0.15 0.15 0.60 <0.05 <0.01
  • One ingot ([0044] route 1, FIG. 1) was heated to 520° C. and held for about 4 hrs before hot rolling to 3.0 mm, with an exit temperature of approximately 325° C. The coil was then cold rolled to a transfer gauge of 400 μm and then cold rolled to a gauge of 95 μm, interannealed at 270° C. for 2 hours at temperature, and further cold rolled to a final gauge of 63 μm (final reduction of about 34%).
  • Post-Brazed Properties: [0045]
    UTS: 138 MPa
    % IACS: 46% IACS
    Potential: −755 mV (According To: ASTM G69 Standard Test
    Method For Measurement Of Corrosion Potentials Of
    Aluminium Alloys)
  • EXAMPLE 2
  • Material produced according to Example 1 as far as the transfer gauge (400 μm) was taken and subjected to a range of interanneal temperatures between 200 and 400° C. for about 2 hrs before cold rolling to 63 μm gauge. [0046]
  • Post-brazed strength trends are shown in FIG. 2—interannealed route. [0047]
  • Corrosion potential trends are shown in FIG. 3—interannealed route. [0048]
  • Conductivity values are approx. 45% IACS. [0049]
  • Additionally, material at transfer gauge was cold rolled directly to 63 μm and given a partial anneal (back anneal) at temperatures between 200 and 400° C. [0050]
  • Post-brazed strength trends are shown in FIG. 2—back annealed route. [0051]
  • Corrosion potential trends are shown in FIG. 3—back annealed route. [0052]
  • Conductivity values are approx. 45.5% IACS. [0053]
  • Example 3
  • Material produced according to Example 1 as far as the transfer gauge (400 μm) was taken and cold rolled to the following gauges: [0054]
  • 253 μm, 125 μm, 95 μm and 89 μm [0055]
  • and interannealed (2 hrs at 270° C.) before cold rolling to a final gauge of 63 μm. Final rolling reductions were: [0056]
  • >70%, 50%, 34% and 30% respectively. [0057]
  • Post-brazed mechanical properties are shown in FIG. 4 (between 135-140 MPa). [0058]
  • Corrosion potentials are shown in FIG. 5 and are largely unaffected by interanneal gauge. [0059]
  • Conductivity is about 45% IACS. [0060]
  • Interanneal gauge is varied to maximise post-brazed grain size which benefits sag resistance during the braze cycle. For example, the thicker the interanneal gauge the smaller the grain size after brazing. Furthermore, the aspect ratio of the grains (length in the cold working direction to the thickness direction) increases as the interanneal gauge is reduced. [0061]
  • EXAMPLE 4
  • Material produced according to the composition noted in Example 1 was taken and heated to 460° C. and held for approximately 4 hours before hot rolling to 3.0 mm gauge. The coil was then cold rolled to a transfer gauge of 400 μm and subsequently cold rolled and interannealed at 360° C., to a final gauge of 63 μm. The final pass reductions were in the range 45 to 25%. [0062]
  • FIG. 6 shows the relationship between post-brazed UTS and grain size. [0063]
  • To achieve maximum UTS the average grain size needs to be less than 50 μm. However, reducing the post-brazed grain size does reduce the sag resistance of the material. [0064]
  • A balance between post-brazed grain size, UTS and sag resistance can be achieved by selecting specific combinations of: [0065]
  • preheat temperature and soak time [0066]
  • interannealing gauge [0067]
  • final cold reduction. [0068]

Claims (19)

1. A DC cast alloy of composition (in wt %):
Fe 0.8-1.5 Si  0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti <0.1 B <0.01 C <0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance.
2. An alloy of claim 1, wherein Cu is present in the range 0.05-0.2.
3. An alloy of claim 1 or 2, wherein Cu is present in the range 0.1-0.15.
4. An alloy according to claim 1, wherein Mg is present in the range 0.05-0.2.
5. An alloy according to claim 1, wherein Mg is present in the range 0.1-0.15.
6. An alloy according to claim 1, wherein Fe is present in the range 0.8-1.4.
7. A DC cast aluminium alloy finstock having a composition (in wt %):
Fe 0.8-1.5 Si  0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti <0.1 B <0.01 C <0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance.
8. An aluminium alloy finstock according to claim 7, having a conductivity after brazing of at least 46% IACS.
9. A brazed heat exchanger having fins of the alloy of claim 1.
10. A method of producing an ingot from an alloy of composition (in wt %):
Fe 0.8-1.5 Si  0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti <0.1 B <0.01 C <0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance, which method comprises DC casting the alloy to form an ingot.
11. A method according to claim 10, further comprising the steps of heating or homogenising the DC cast ingot, hot rolling, cold rolling, and annealing or interannealing.
12. A method according to claim 11, further comprising the step of cold rolling after the interannealing step.
13. A method according to claim 12, wherein the thickness reduction during the step of cold rolling after interannealing is between 25 and 45%.
14. A method according to claim 11, wherein the homogenising step is a two-stage homogenisation comprising heating the ingot to 580-620° C., holding for up to 8 hours, cooling to 460-500° C. and holding for up to 8 hours.
15. A method according to claim 11, wherein the heating step comprises heating to 460-540° C. and holding for up to 8 hours.
16. A method according to claim 11, wherein the annealing or interannealing step is a single stage process comprising heating at 250-450° C.
17. A method according to claim 11, wherein the annealing or interannealing step is a two-stage process comprising heating at 300-500° C. and cooling to 200-350° C.
18. A method according to claim 11, further comprising the step of brazing, wherein the particle size of the intermetallics and dispersoids present in the rolled product is sufficiently large such that the reduction in IACS is less than 5% units during brazing.
19. A method of producing an aluminium alloy finstock from an alloy comprising (in wt %):
Fe 0.8-1.5 Si  0.7-0.95 Mn 0.2-0.5 Zn 0.2-0.8 Mg up to 0.2 Cu up to 0.2 Ti <0.1 B <0.01 C <0.01 Unavoidable impurities up to 0.05 each, 0.15 total Al balance, which method comprises DC casting the alloy, heating or homogenising, hot rolling, cold rolling and annealing or interannealing.
US10/471,437 2001-03-22 2002-03-18 DC cast Al alloy Abandoned US20040182482A1 (en)

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GB0107208.1 2001-03-22
GBGB0107208.1A GB0107208D0 (en) 2001-03-22 2001-03-22 "Al Alloy"
PCT/GB2002/001275 WO2002077307A1 (en) 2001-03-22 2002-03-18 Dc cast ai alloy

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US20100086717A1 (en) * 2006-11-14 2010-04-08 Ria Van Den Broeck Creep resistant aluminium alloy for multilayer tubes
US20160116236A1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2016-04-28 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US20160116235A1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2016-04-28 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US9719156B2 (en) 2011-12-16 2017-08-01 Novelis Inc. Aluminum fin alloy and method of making the same
US11933553B2 (en) 2014-08-06 2024-03-19 Novelis Inc. Aluminum alloy for heat exchanger fins

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WO2004094679A1 (en) * 2003-04-24 2004-11-04 Alcan International Limited Alloys from recycled aluminum scrap containing high levels of iron and silicon
JP4702797B2 (en) * 2006-02-20 2011-06-15 住友軽金属工業株式会社 Manufacturing method of aluminum alloy clad material excellent in surface bondability by brazing of sacrificial anode material surface
CN101660883B (en) * 2009-09-04 2011-10-26 东莞市奥达铝业有限公司 Manufacturing method of vehicle aluminum alloy radiating fin
CN114606414B (en) * 2022-03-11 2022-12-02 北京理工大学 High-conductivity regenerated aluminum alloy conductor and preparation method thereof

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US6165291A (en) * 1998-07-23 2000-12-26 Alcan International Limited Process of producing aluminum fin alloy

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US20100086717A1 (en) * 2006-11-14 2010-04-08 Ria Van Den Broeck Creep resistant aluminium alloy for multilayer tubes
US8241719B2 (en) 2006-11-14 2012-08-14 Aleris Aluminum Duffell BVBA Creep resistant aluminium alloy for multilayer tubes
US9719156B2 (en) 2011-12-16 2017-08-01 Novelis Inc. Aluminum fin alloy and method of making the same
US20160116236A1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2016-04-28 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US20160116235A1 (en) * 2013-07-05 2016-04-28 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US10145630B2 (en) * 2013-07-05 2018-12-04 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US10161693B2 (en) * 2013-07-05 2018-12-25 Uacj Corporation Aluminum alloy fin material for heat exchangers, and method of producing the same
US11933553B2 (en) 2014-08-06 2024-03-19 Novelis Inc. Aluminum alloy for heat exchanger fins

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WO2002077307A1 (en) 2002-10-03

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