ALUMINIUMTECHNOLOGIES Week6
ALUMINIUMTECHNOLOGIES Week6
ALUMINIUMTECHNOLOGIES Week6
3.11.2015
Term paper topics
Cenk Eken ultrasonic processing of aluminium melts
Murat Teke assesment of melt quality via K-mold method
Emre Ac applications of aluminium foams
Gazican zkan injection casting of aluminium alloys
Engin Kln
Mehmet Alkaya high integrity casting processes
Haluk Erdemir additive manufacturing of aluminium alloys
Serhan Kkta rheo-casting of aluminium alloys and their
applications
Alper Gneren friction stir processing of aluminium alloys
Emre Baran production of aluminium foams
Berkay Oral FSW automotive aluminium
Erkut zer casting of hypereutectic Al-Si alloys and their
applications
zzet Nahid Demir Casting of Al-Mg based foundry alloys and
their applications
Mehmet Yasak surface treatment of aluminium alloys
Krat Kambur severe plastic deformation of aluminium alloys
steel vs aluminium for automotive applications
Tensile stresses
that develop during
solidification
Hot tearing
Hot tearing in a
DC cast 7XXX
billet produced
by ET
Aluminium!
Hot tearing
Hot tearing in a
DC cast 7XXX
billet produced
by ET
Aluminium!
prevention of hot tears
Alter casting design
Chill hot spots
Reduce constraint from mould
Add brackets and webs
Employ effective grain refinement
Reduce casting temperature
Adjust/optimise alloying
Reduce contracting length
prevention of hot tears
It may be possible to alter the geometry of the casting
to reduce stress concentrations and hot spots, for
example, by providing generous radii at vulnerable
sections.
Local hot spots can be reduced by local chilling which
will strengthen the metal by taking it out of the
susceptible temperature range.
There are various ways of reducing the mould strength
so that it provides less constraint to the contracting
casting.
Brackets and webs can be placed across a vulnerable
corner or hot spot to provide mechanical support and
to enhance local cooling.
prevention of hot tears
A reduction in the casting temperature can sometimes
help, probably because it reduces the grain size.
Grain refinement should help to reduce tear initiation
since the strain will be spread over a greater number of
grain boundaries.
increasing the volume fraction of eutectic liquid may
help by increasing the pre-tear extension and by
decreasing the cracking susceptibility.
Finally, it is sometimes possible to site feeders
carefully so that the casting is effectively split up into
a series of short lengths to reduce the strain
concentration.
Cold cracks
Form below the solidus temperature
Straighter and smoother than hot tears
Transgranular or intergranular
Can be oxide-free (if formed at low Ts)
Sources of stress Prevention
Differential cooling Reduce stress raisers
Mould/core restraint avoid abrupt changes of section
Phase transformation eliminate oxide defects
Heat treatment Reduce mould/core restraint
Eliminate or use alternative heat
treatments
Reduction in quenching stresses
Rates of cooling of a
20mm diameter
aluminium bar when
quenched by various
means from 500 C.
time, s
Effect of quenching
medium on ductility
intermetallics
Modified overmodified
Silicon modification
1. seviye 3. seviye 5. seviye
temperature
ck cs
c0 composition
segregation
Compositional fluctuations that scale with the
dendritic structure: dendritic segregation-coring
50m 50m
As-cast 206 alloy (4.4% Cu-0.3 %Mg-0.3 %Mn)
Homogenization anneal
Segregation in the as-cast component can be largely
eliminated by a high temperature soak called
homogenization. Homogenization is a must for parts
that will be
subjected to
forming
Operations.
Homogenization anneal
High temperature annealing treatment to remove
dendritic segregation!
1 mm
B
Oxide inclusions
Extrageneous oxide inclusions
Possible defects
Possible defects
defect inclusions (mainly oxides)
Possible main Retention system for oxide skin of metal
cause not efficient enough; the two metal
fronts hit together
Ways to avoid Use and optimize oxide retention
defects systems; fronts with oxides should be
brought into overflows
overflow
Possible defects
Defect Shrinkage porosity
Possible main cause Feeding of large cross sections is not
good enough.
Way to avoid defects Dimension runner and gating systems for
good feeding; use numerical simulation to
control and optimise them.
Possible defects
why aluminium
castings?
Properties of castings
Roughly two thirds of all aluminium castings are
automotive where the use of aluminum castings
continues to grow at the expense of iron castings.
Although aluminium castings are significantly more
expensive than ferrous castings, there is a continuing
market requirement to reduce vehicle weight and to
increase fuel efficiency.
Aluminium castings are widely used in cars for engine
blocks, cylinder heads, pistons, rocker covers, inlet
manifolds, differential casings, steering boxes,
brackets, wheels etc.
Al castings in EU cars is expected to reach 200 kg by
year 2020.
Aluminium casting alloys
Easy to cast!
Al-Si alloys with sufficient Si exhibit outstanding
flowing properties during casting and facilitates
the casting of huge complex components.
Design features can be produced easily with
minimum tolerances.
The mold filling capacity of 3xx.x alloys is
exceptionally high!
Hence, 3xx.x alloys are preferred in the casting of
big complex parts.
Aluminium casting alloys
High strength!
High strength levels are possible through heat
treatment!
High strength and tougness can be achieved by a
precise mold design that allows for rapid cooling
during solidification.
Highest strength values are possible with 2xx.x
alloys; however, casting of these alloys is
relatively more difficult and requires special
attention.
These alloys are selected for aerospace
applications where strength is a critical issue.
Aluminium casting alloys
Surface quality
A very high surface quality is possible by a
careful selection of the casting alloy.
5xx.x and 7xx.x alloys offer outstanding surface
quality.
However, casting of these alloys is difficult and
they are employed only in those applications
where surface quality is a must!
For example, rulman uygulamalar iin 7xx.x
alloys are preferred for bearing applications
owing to their high surface quality.
aluminium casting
processes
Aluminium production routes
Primary production 99.7 wt%Al
melting+melt treatment
alloying
Foundry alloys casting Wrought alloys
Mould designing is
a particularly
complex art.
Half mould with
cores and an
example of a cast
air intake for a
turbocharger
Sand Casting
With the
exception of
pressure
diecasting, runner riser
green sand gate
casting is the
most
productive sand core
casting
process.
Bottom board
Sand Casting
Sand Casting
Sand casting includes green sand
core assembly processes
lost foam process
It accounts for 1215% of all aluminium castings.
It is generally used for high-volume production.
Two main routes are used for bonding the sand moulds:
The "green sand" consists of mixtures of sand, clay
and moisture.
The "dry sand" consists of sand and synthetic
binders cured thermally or chemically.
The sand cores for forming the inside of hollow parts
of the casting are made using dry sand components.
Sand Casting processes
With sand casting, productivity is not affected by
the solidification time but only by the rate at which
the sand mould/core package can be produced.
(In GDC and LPDC, the die is effectively out of use
during the time that the casting is solidifying.)
With automatic green sand moulding and cold-box
coremaking, mould/core packages can be made and
assembled in times which enable high production
rates to be achieved without the need for the costly
multiple tooling sets needed by diecasting.
Moulding machines can produce moulds at the very
high rate of one every 12 seconds.
Green sand casting
The slower rate of cooling of sand castings
compared with die castings leads to smaller
temperature gradients and a wider solidification
time range, making feeding more difficult.
The grain structure of slower-cooled sand cast
aluminium is usually regarded as inferior to that
of chill cast alloys.
To counter this potential problem, moulding sand
based on magnetite ore can be used to increase
the chilling effect.
Green sand casting
There has also been some concern that aluminium
alloys may pick up hydrogen from moisture in the
green sand, but it is not a problem if the sand
system is correctly controlled to avoid excessive
water.
Unlike green sand used for iron casting, it is not
necessary to have coal dust in the sand to improve
casting surface finish.
To make high integrity sand castings, the melt
must be carefully treated to remove hydrogen and
oxides from the melt and must be grain refined
and modified.
Green sand casting
The simplest method of filling moulds rapidly and
without introducing oxide defects into the casting is by
using ceramic foam filters in the running system.
Ceramic filters remove already entrained oxide and
reduce turbulence downstream of the filter.
Top pouring through a filter is an efficient way of filling
sand moulds, giving high yield and excellent mechanical
properties.
To produce shrinkage porosity-free castings,
directional solidification must be encouraged, with the
use of feeders to supply liquid metal to the last sections
of the casting to solidify.
Simulation techniques are increasingly being used to
design running and feeding systems.
Green sand casting
The traditional green sand casting process, combined
with high-speed moulding lines, is a very flexible
process with high productivity for the manufacture of
aluminium castings.
For automotive applications, the process is used to
cast:
Intake manifolds
Oil pan housings
Structural parts
Chassis parts
Green sand castings
Automated green sand casting
AGSC offers a reasonable alternative to conventional
die casting processes (high pressure/low pressure
/vacuum-assisted or not).
This holds for middle and high volume series,
especially for automotive applications.
Manufacturing in high pressure die casting is limited
by wall-thickness and design. I.e. producing a
complicated inner structure by using lost cores is
still not economically feasible in this process.
Low pressure die casting's productivity is limited by
solidification time, leading to cycle times of
typically several minutes.
Automated green sand casting has no such limits.
Automated green sand casting
Examples of AGSC castings
From left:
Heat Exchanger
Hat Profile
Brake Calipers
Knuckles
wheel
Automated green sand casting
The AGSC casting process is a container-less sand
casting process.
The mold is divided upright.
Front and rear mold half are formed by the shaped
faces of every sand block.
Stacked on a conveyor belt, the pouring cavity is
between two blocks each.
Insertion of individual cores or whole core packets
is possible and can be carried out in an automated
manner.
The finished molds are pushed forward when a
new sand block is added.
Automated green sand casting
can produce and fill up to 400 sand molds per hour.
By using multiple cavities for smaller parts an hourly output
surpassing all other casting processes is achievable.
Overview of the AGSC Process
Complete Control of Mold Filling Combined With High
Productivity
Core package casting
the entire sand mould consists of single sand cores,
industrially applied first in 1970 using low pressure
filling by means of an electromagnetic pump.
Due to low productivity, the process is restricted to
low volume series.
However, the increasing interest in the outstanding
dimensional quality and possible complexity of
the castings led to further developments and thus,
(e.g.) the Core Package System (CPS) has
become an established casting process for the
volume production of engine blocks.
Core package casting
Partly assembled core
package for a 4-cylinder
engine block
Source: IdraPres
High pressure die casting
Die filling times are very short, castings with wall
thickness of 34 mm are filled in less than 0.1
seconds.
Cycle times depend on size and section thickness of
the component, being typically 40 shots/h for a 5 kg
component.
Production rates are fast, the process can be highly
automated, and dimensional accuracy and surface
finish are excellent.
Thin-walled components are possible and little or
no machining is needed on the cast component since
holes, grooves and recesses can be finish cast.
High Pressure Die Casting
Dies are expensive but can survive more than 105
shots. The process is therefore most suitable for
long runs of castings.
With an highly automated operation, the HPDC
process is capable of extremely high levels of
productivity.
1 mm
1 mm
High pressure die casting
Productivity is usually
enhanced via multi-
cavity die designs, e.g.
4 to 8 cavities per die.
Production rates are up
to 100 parts per hour
per cavity.
Al18Si (AA 391) Alloy Microstrucuture - Typical AlSi8Cu (AA 380 microstructure),
Primary Si Imparts Wear Resistance Hypoeutectic Al-Si plus Fe phases
Low pressure diecasting
A metal die is mounted above a sealed furnace
containing molten metal.
A refractory-lined tube, called a riser tube or stalk,
extends from the bottom of the die into the molten
metal.
When air is introduced into the furnace under low
pressure (15100 kPa), the molten metal rises up the
tube to enter the die cavity with low turbulence, the
air in the die escaping through vents and the parting
lines of the die.
When the metal has solidified, the air pressure is
released allowing the still-molten metal in the riser
tube to fall back into the furnace.
Low Pressure Die Casting
the die is filled from a pressurised crucible below, and
pressures of up to 0.7 bar are usual.
Low-pressure die
casting is especially
suited to the
production of
components that are
Pressurising symmetric about an
gases axis of rotation. Light
automotive wheels
Fill stalk
are normally
manufactured by this
technique.
Low pressure die casting
Mould filling is controlled by regulating the pressure in
the casting furnace.
The melt flows through the riser tube which is
positioned under the melt surface of the furnace and
fills the mould very smoothly with clean melt from the
bottom up.
After mould filling, solidification starts from the
opposite end of the mould in the direction of the tube.
By increasing the pressure in the casting furnace, good
feeding is guaranteed.
Cycle times are long since the casting is connected to
the big melt volume by the riser tube during
solidification.
Low pressure
die casting
Vacuum diecasting
The shot tube and die cavity are evacuated before metal
injection to reduce the amount of air that is trapped.
Pore-free diecasting
The cavity is flushed with oxygen rather than air. The oxygen
should then combine with the liquid aluminium, forming
oxide which is less harmful than gas entrapment.
Vacuum die casting of precision
engineered die cast products
Used when no surface
flaws such as blisters etc
are forgiven. When high
temperature powder
coating is an essential
step in manufacturing
cycle.
Modification of the diecasting process
Indirect squeeze casting
Metal is injected into a closed die cavity by a small
diameter piston which also exerts sustained pressure during
solidification.
a special thermally insulating die release agent is used to
provide a significant thermal barrier between the casting
and the die during filling allowing the metal to be fed
further into the die cavity without freezing.
When pressure is applied to the full cavity, the die coating
is compressed reducing its insulating effect.
The metal velocity during filling is controlled to ensure
non-turbulent flow so that air entrapment is minimised.
When the cavity has been completely filled, the pressure is
applied (from 60 to 100 MPa).
Modification of the diecasting process
It is most important that the temperature gradients
within the die are controlled so that the casting
freezes directionally towards the gate area.
This gate area is made deliberately very thick so that
it will be the last area to solidify.
In this way, all the metal freezes under pressure
reducing the possibility of shrinkage porosity.
The low metal velocities used do not wash release
agent from the die faces so that contact between the
alloy and the die steel is reduced.
There is no need to use high-iron alloys to prevent
Soldering.
Modification of the diecasting process
The resulting physical properties of the castings
are much enhanced over conventional pressure
diecastings.
the gas content is low so that heat treatment is
possible and hydraulic integrity good. Indirect
squeeze castings can be used for critical
components such as brake callipers and hydraulic
components.
Modification of the diecasting process
disadvantages:
large, thin, wall castings are not possible,
yield is reduced because of the large gate section
that must be used,
shot rates are slower than in conventional
pressure diecasting and
the machines are expensive.
Investment Casting
wax patterns are coated with a refractory (i.e. the
patterns are invested in alternate layers of slurry and
stucco), and are subsequently melted out to leave a
hollow shell into which the metal is cast.
It is an extremely slow process and the production rate is
governed by the time to make the mould.
The production of a wax pattern might take only 1 or 2
minutes but most ceramic shell moulds require between 7
and 14 coats and take at least 24 hours and sometimes as
long as several days to complete.
However, it is now normal practice to make several
hundred moulds automatically in one batch and, of
course, each mould may comprise several dozen or over a
hundred small components.
Investment Casting Processes
Stages in investment (lost wax) casting
Make wax pattern in die
Assemble patterns onto 'tree'
Build up ceramic shell mould
Dewax and fire shell
Pour metal and allow to solidify
Remove shell
Separate castings from runner system
and fettle
The Lost Foam Casting process
The actual LFC-process uses patterns of
expandable polystyrene (EPS) for industrial
applications.
These patterns, directly foamed to shape, are
immersed in a moulding box with binderless sand.
The liquid metal, which is poured into the cups of
the downsprues, vaporises the EPS pattern, which
is precisely replaced by the metal.
With the possibility of assembled patterns very
complex shapes can be created and the castings
can be reproduced with remarkable dimensional
accuracy.
The Lost Foam Casting process
the filling rate of the mould is determined by the rate at
which the EPS pattern is destroyed by the liquid alloy.
This in turn is greatly affected by the properties,
particularly permeability, of the coating.
The result is an essentially turbulence-free mode of
filling, whether from the bottom, side or top.
Due to the freedom from turbulence and its associated
trapping of oxide films, lost foam aluminium castings can
be of high metallurgical integrity.
The process is therefore increasingly used for critical
automotive castings such as cylinder heads and blocks,
water , brackets, inlet manifolds up to about 20 kg
weight.
The Lost Foam Casting process
LFC offers the possibility of a direct production of
nearly any complex geometry including
complicated undercuts and cavities without tapers
and the need for considerable finishing work.
Compared to the conventional sand casting
methods it has economical and ecological
advantages.
It is still used for rapid prototyping of intricate
components or large castings.
The 'lost foam' process
Stages in the 'lost foam' process
Produce expanded polystyrene pattern
Assemble patterns onto runner system
Coat with ceramic slurry and dry
Embed in sand and vibrate to consolidate
Pour metal
Remove from sand
Clean and fettle castings
The lost foam process
Pattern making.
First step in the LFC-process is the pre-expansion of EPS
beads. After maturing the beads are blown into a mould
forming the pattern sections. The mould is then steamed to
expand the beads further and tightly fill the cavity of the
mould. Hot steam and expansion of the beads causes them to
weld together.
Cluster assembly. Complicated parts including undercuts and
hidden cavities cannot be moulded in one working step, but
are assembled from pattern segments into a final pattern.
Joining techniques used are gluing, heated platen welding and
plugging. In order to increase the efficiency of the total
process several patterns are combined into a cluster and
supplied with a common gate system, also made of EPS.
The lost foam process
Pattern assembly
Source: BMW AG
Landshut
Cluster with
two cylinder
heads
The lost foam process
Coating:
The clusters are coated with a refractory coating layer
by immersion in a water soluble ceramic slurry.
The coating layer has the function of guiding the
gasification process of the pattern and to form a
barrier between the moulding material and the gas-
filled bubble which exists between the still solid EPS-
pattern and the intruding aluminium melt.
After the coating has dried, a thin, hard and
permeable coating remains.
The coatings are typically applied to a foam cluster by
dipping, spraying or pouring.
The lost foam process
Embedding in sand:
After the coating has dried, the cluster is placed in a flask
and backed up with unbonded quartz sand without
chemical additives.
The sand is compacted through vibration with various
frequencies, which causes the sand to fill all hidden
cavities of the patterns.
Permeable coating
The lost foam process
Form filling velocity and type of metal flow, i.e.
laminar or turbulent, determine the part's quality by
influencing the amount of oxide inclusions and
porosity.
Specifically, the following sets of parameters have to
be tuned to each other:
permeability of coating,
optional external vacuum,
metal temperature,
EPS-pattern density and type of adhesive,
geometry of the gating / riser system and of the
patterns
The lost foam process
Dumping, quenching and trimming:
After solidification of the casting, the sand can be removed
from the flask and be prepared for the following moulding.
Clusters are quenched and knocked-off from the gate system.
The castings are purged and controlled w.r.t. defects. In
many applications the castings don't require any further
mechanical finishing.
Advantages
Low tooling cost: Though tools are expensive, their
life is long, up to 500 000 cycles are possible. So for
long-running, high volume parts overall tool costs
are much lower than for conventional casting
process. For shorter running parts the advantage is
less and may even be a disadvantage.
Reduced finishing: There is a major advantage on
most castings since finishing is restricted to
removing ingates.
Reduced machining: For many applications,
machining is greatly reduced and in some cases
eliminated completely.
Advantages
Ability to make complex castings: For suitable
applications, the ability to glue patterns together
to make complex parts is a major advantage.
Reduced environmental problems: Lost Foam is
fume-free in the foundry and the sand, which
contains the EPS residues, is easily reclaimed using
a simple thermal process. (binder-less recirculated
sand/no sand reclaiming system)
high productivity
high flexibility
potential for Rapid Prototyping
good surface quality.
Disadvantages
The process is difficult to automate completely;
cluster assembly and coating involve manual
labour unless a complete casting plant is dedicated
to one casting type so that specialised mechanical
handling can be developed.
Methoding the casting is not easy and a good deal
of experimentation is needed before a good
casting is achieved.
Cast-to-size can be achieved but only after several
tool modifications because the contractions of
foam and casting cannot yet be accurately
predicted.
Disadvantages
long lead times are inevitable for new castings.
it is difficult to achieve the highest metallurgical
quality in Al castings because of the need to cast at
rather higher than normal temperatures. (However,
new thermally insulating coatings are available for
the patterns and allow lower casting temperatures.)
possible deformation of pattern during sand fill and
compaction,
possible entrapment of plastic residues caused by
non-optimised gating systems,
large number of process parameters need to be
controlled for optimum form filling.
Lost foam casting
Cylinder heads
BMW AG Landshut
The Lost Foam casting process
Applications
The usual alloys used for sand and gravity casting
can be cast successfully by Lost Foam and the
methods of melting and treatment are the same.
The automotive industry is a major user.
The inlet manifold was the first successful high
volume application.
Cylinder heads are being made in growing numbers.
Use of Lost Foam gives the designer rather more
freedom to cool the working face effectively, the
combustion chambers can be formed as-cast,
avoiding an expensive machining operation, and
bolt holes can be cast.
Applications
Lost Foam offers significant design advantages
over other casting processes for cylinder blocks;
features can be cast in, such as the water pump
cavity, alternator bracket, oil filter mounting pad.
Oil feed, drain and coolant lines can also be cast
more effectively.
A variety of other automotive parts are being made
including water pump housings, brackets, heat
exchangers, fuel pumps, brake cylinders.
Semi-solid processing
Semi-solid-route?
Solid feedstock Liquid alloy
forging Pressure die casting
Microstructure of
AlSi7Mg0.3 after
re-heating
Rheocasting
Liquid metal is directly cooled down to the semi-solid state
and processed to the final product. Since 1999, this process
family is gaining new attention