gieter
Materials
- Jun 3, 2003
- 122
I’m methods engineer in a steel foundry. We make castings up to 25 tons casted weight. The metal has to be poured fast to avoid preliminar solidification and break down of the sand mould. To give you an idea, a 25 ton casting will typically be poured in 2 to 3 minutes.
The metal is poured out of a ladle with a hole in its bottom that can be opened by lifting a stopper rod. In the mould standard size ceramic tubes, bends and T’s will direct the liquid metal into the mould cavity, preferably from underneath to avoid splashing and reoxidation of the steel.
To be honest, little calculation is used to dimension this gating system. The metal velocity at the entrance of the down sprue is dependant on the level of liquid metal in the ladle, the size of the exit nozzle and the distance between the bottom of the ladle and the entrance into the mould (typically 2 to 4 m/s). At present the gating system is oversized to be sure it can “swallow” the metal delivered from the ladle, without the operator having to adjust the metal flow with the stopper as this would cause heavy turbulence and hence reoxidation and slag formation in the casting. But due to the over sizing of the gating system, this is only filled completely at the end of the pour. Especially in the beginning the metal stream is smaller than the internal diameter of the tubing. Again a problem of reoxidation occurs, as air can be sucked in with the turbulent metal stream.
A long story to come to my question: Can anyone put me in the direction of how to calculate what is happening in the early stages of the filling of the casting, when the metal stream is small compared to the size of the tubing and encounters T’s and bends while not completely filling the system. How are losses calculated? Does there exist software to simulate this behaviour. We use casting simulation software with a filling module based on the Navier-Stokes equation, but the losses due to friction are not sufficiently modelled and the software has problems handling free falling liquid streams.
Any help is much appreciated,
The metal is poured out of a ladle with a hole in its bottom that can be opened by lifting a stopper rod. In the mould standard size ceramic tubes, bends and T’s will direct the liquid metal into the mould cavity, preferably from underneath to avoid splashing and reoxidation of the steel.
To be honest, little calculation is used to dimension this gating system. The metal velocity at the entrance of the down sprue is dependant on the level of liquid metal in the ladle, the size of the exit nozzle and the distance between the bottom of the ladle and the entrance into the mould (typically 2 to 4 m/s). At present the gating system is oversized to be sure it can “swallow” the metal delivered from the ladle, without the operator having to adjust the metal flow with the stopper as this would cause heavy turbulence and hence reoxidation and slag formation in the casting. But due to the over sizing of the gating system, this is only filled completely at the end of the pour. Especially in the beginning the metal stream is smaller than the internal diameter of the tubing. Again a problem of reoxidation occurs, as air can be sucked in with the turbulent metal stream.
A long story to come to my question: Can anyone put me in the direction of how to calculate what is happening in the early stages of the filling of the casting, when the metal stream is small compared to the size of the tubing and encounters T’s and bends while not completely filling the system. How are losses calculated? Does there exist software to simulate this behaviour. We use casting simulation software with a filling module based on the Navier-Stokes equation, but the losses due to friction are not sufficiently modelled and the software has problems handling free falling liquid streams.
Any help is much appreciated,