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Metal head-dependent HTC in sand casting simulation of aluminium alloys

Wybrane pełne teksty z tego czasopisma
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Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Purpose: In order to obtain reliable sand casting products, it is essential that the temperature distribution within the alloy during cooling is accurately known at each point by FEM simulation. This requires a great precision in setting the Heat Transfer Coefficients (HTC) at the boundaries. In particular for castings of big size, chills are frequently at different heights, so that remarkable differences arise from the metal head effect. Design/methodology/approach: An A356 alloy was cast and cooled. The castings were mono-directionally solidified in a experimental equipment modified to accept a controlled variable metal-head. HTC were evaluated in a side arm, where a chill end ensured a dominant unidirectional heat flow during cooling. At the end of a square horizontal channel, an aluminium chill of the same section and 60 mm in depth determined nearly one-dimensional cooling conditions. Findings: The evolution of heat transfer coefficient (HTC) in the sand casting of A357 aluminum alloy against aluminum chills is evaluated with different metal heads in order to study the effect of pressure on the HTC. Inverse modeling techniques based on Beck's analysis were used to determine the experimental evolution of HTC as a function of time, casting temperature and chill temperature. The HTC evolution at the casting-chill boundary is then described as a function of local parameters such as casting-chill interface pressure (as long as they are in contact) and interface gap (when solidification shrinkage occurs and the casting detaches from the chill). Practical implications: Finally, the experiments are reconstructed by means of coupled thermal-stress numerical analyses and the predicted cooling curves are fitted to the experimental ones by adjusting model parameters. As a result, the best parameters for describing the HTC evolution are found, thus allowing to extrapolate any possible HTC behavior on chills at different heights for the same casting. Originality/value: Some transient interface pressure can develop between casting and chill, the effect being negligible in HTC evaluation with the aim to precisely predict the cooling evolution inside the casting.
Rocznik
Strony
47--52
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 12 poz., il., wykr.
Twórcy
autor
Bibliografia
  • [1] J. Campbell, Casting, Second Edition, Butterworth-Heinemann, Oxford, 2003.
  • [2] M. A. Gafur, M. N. Haque, K. N. Prabhu, Effect of chill thickness and superheat on casting/chill interfacial heat transfer during solidification of commercially pure aluminium, Journal of Materials Processing Technology 133/3 (2003) 257-265.
  • [3] W. D. Griffiths, The heat transfer coefficient during the unidirectional solidification of an Al-Si alloy casting, Metal and Materials Transitions 30B (1999) 473-482.
  • [4] W. D. Griffiths, Modelled heat transfer coefficients for Al-7 wt-%Si alloy castings unidirectionally solidified horizontally and vertically downwards, Materials Science and Technology 16 (2000) 255-260.
  • [5] A. Meneghini, L. Tomesani, Chill material and size effects on HTC evolution in sand casting of aluminium alloys, Journal of Materials Processing Technology 162-163 (2005) 534-539.
  • [6] S. M. H. Mirbagheri, M. Shrinpavar, A. Chirazi, Modelling of metalo-static pressure on the metal-mould interface thermal resistance in the casting process, Materials and Design (2008) (article in press).
  • [7] N. Matsubara, Effect of pressure on metal-die heat transfer coefficient during solidification, Materials Science and Engineering 40 (1979) 105-110.
  • [8] J. Davies, Heat transfer in gravity die castings, British Foundryman 73 (1980) 331-334.
  • [9] A. Meneghini, L. Tomesani, G. S. Cellini, Relation between HTC evolution, gap formation and stress analysis at the chill interface in aluminium sand casting, Proceedings of the 136th Annual Meeting and Exhibition „TMS 2007: Linking Science and Technology for Global Solutions”, Orlando, 2007, 241-248.
  • [10] S. Shen, Numerical study of inverse heat conduction problems, Computers and Mathematics with Applications 38 (1999) 173-188.
  • [11] J. Liu, A stability analysis on Beck's procedure for inverse heat conduction problems, Journal of Computational Physics 123 (1996) 65-73.
  • [12] J. V. Beck, B. Blackwell, Comparison of some inverse heat conduction methods using experimental data, International Journal of Heat Mass Transfer 39/17 (1996) 3649-3657.
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-article-BWAN-0003-0055
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