Some Studies on Process Parameters in Centrifugal Casting
Date
2014
Authors
Madhusudhan
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
In a centrifugal casting process, the fluid behavior of the melt plays an important role
in determining the quality of the final products. There are many parameters which
influence the centrifugal casting process namely pouring temperature of the melt,
initial temperature of the mold, thermal conductivity of the mold material, rotational
speed of the mold, size of the mold and time taken for pouring the melt into the mold,
etc. Rotational speed of the mold is one such parameter amongst the important
process variables which affect the rate of solidification of the molten metal. When the
liquid is rotated in partially filled cylindrical mold at different rotational speeds, it
exhibits various flow patterns, namely Ekmann flow, Couette flow and Taylor flow;
these are disturbing flows inside the cylinder. A brief survey of the earlier literature
indicates that many investigations have been carried out to study the behavior of the
liquids and its effect on the casting process. The microstructures of the castings are
influenced mainly by the behavior of molten metal flow during rotation of the mold.
To get a uniform hollow cylinder, the molten metal must spread along the axis after
being poured and must slide along the inner surface of the mold. But the factors
involved in fluid instabilities that influence the quality of the casting and rate of
cooling need to be investigated. The analysis of liquid flow during centrifugal casting
is very difficult to comprehend due to the opaque nature of the melt and the mold and
the viscosity of the liquid varies with time. The phase change, due to heat transfer also
adds to the complexity of the problem. Since the mold and melts are opaque, motion
of the melt cannot be visualized and analyzed with conventional measurement
techniques. Therefore in order to study the various liquid patterns and the rate of
cooling at different rotational speeds, it is necessary to make preliminary
examinations about the nature of the liquid flow in a partially filled rotating cylinder
at various rotational speeds. Cold modeling experiments have been carried out using
liquids with different viscosities to study the fluid behavior. Influence of rotational
speed of the mold, its optimization to form a liquid cylinder and regular cooling rates
at different rotational speeds have been carried out. In this research work, an attempt is made to study the process of solidification and the
effect of solidification structures on the mechanical properties of centrifugal castings.
The three types of solidification processes have been carried out. One being the
solidification of pure Tin and the others being the solidification of alloys such as
eutectic Al-12wt%Si alloy and a hypereutectic Al-17wt%Si alloy they have a range of
temperature to solidify. Tin metal is used to study the metallurgical behavior of pure
metal, as it is having low melting temperature of 231oC, Al-12wt%Si alloy of melting
temperature 577oC and Al-17wt%Si alloy of melting temperature 577oC to 620oC are
used to analyze the metallurgical behavior of the alloys and also to study the particle
segregation in the cylinder across the thickness of the casting. Eutectic as we know is
a reversible isothermal reaction of a liquid metal which forms two different solid
phases in a binary system upon cooling, i.e., L= α +β. This is an invariant reaction in
which liquid phase transforms to two solid phases.
The rate of solidification of any melt during centrifugal castings is of great
importance because of its role in determining the microstructure and mechanical
properties. The rate of solidification of pure metal in centrifugal casting is measured
based on the grain size and for the Al-Si alloys it is measured based on the Secondary
Dendrite Arm Spacing (SDAS). In this work properties like grain size, solidification
rate, hardness, and specific wear rate are determined. It is found that the regions
where rapid solidification occurs, there fine equi-axed grains are observed and coarse
grains are observed at regions where slow solidification takes place.
In casting experiments the cooling curves were drawn for the gravity castings which
were made initially by monitoring the cooling rate. The microstructures were
analyzed using image analyzer. Grain sizes have been measured and a graph is plotted
for rate of solidification verses grain size. Using this data the rates of solidification of
centrifugal castings are inferred, based on the grain size of the castings. The effect of
mold wall thickness on rate of solidification is evaluated by making the castings using
molds with varying wall thickness. Experiments have been conducted to study the
effect of mold preheating on rate of solidification. As the mold temperature increases
the temperature difference between the die and the molten metal decreases and hencerate of solidification decreases. Fast solidification rate leads to the fine grain
formation leading to an increase in hardness and decrease in specific wear rate. For all
the cases the variation in hardness along the radial direction is determined. Specific
wear rate have been determined at the inner and outer surfaces of the cylindrical
castings. For the Al-12wt%Si centrifugal casting by evaluating SDAS the
solidification rates have been calculated.
Variation in hardness and specific wear rate were also studied. Fine grains were
observed at the outer surface of the cylindrical tin casting which is due to the chilling
effect and hence the hardness was found to be higher compared to the hardness at the
inner surface. It is also found that hardness is gradually decreasing towards the inner
radius of the casting. But in case of Al-12wt%Si at the outer surface the hardness is
higher due to chilling effect with the cold mold wall. At the inner surface hardness is
higher due to the segregation of Si particles at the inner surface, because of its lower
density with the matrix and also due to the centrifugal effect on the Si particles at
higher speeds of rotation of the mold. Similar results have been obtained in case of
Al-17wt %Si castings with slightly higher hardness at the inner surface of the casting.
Description
Keywords
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Centrifugal Casting, Grain Size, Gravity Casting, Hardness, Rate of Solidification, Secondary Dendritic Arm Spacing, Specific Wear Rate