Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing

"Tautologically, castability is a critical requirement in any casting process. The two most important factors impacting castability are the susceptibility of a metal to hot tearing and the degree of casting fluidity a material possesses. This work concerns itself with fluidity of molten metal....

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Main Author: Dewhirst, Brian A
Other Authors: Fred J. Major, Committee Member
Format: Others
Published: Digital WPI 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/422
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1421&context=etd-dissertations
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spelling ndltd-wpi.edu-oai-digitalcommons.wpi.edu-etd-dissertations-14212019-03-22T05:44:11Z Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing Dewhirst, Brian A "Tautologically, castability is a critical requirement in any casting process. The two most important factors impacting castability are the susceptibility of a metal to hot tearing and the degree of casting fluidity a material possesses. This work concerns itself with fluidity of molten metal. Since experimental investigations into casting fluidity began, researchers have sought to maximize fluidity through superheat, mold temperature, alloy chemistry, melt cleanliness, and mold design. Researchers who have examined the published results in the field have remarked on the difficulty of making quantitative comparisons and drawing conclusions from the data. Ragone developed a horizontal vacuum fluidity apparatus and an analytical expression for fluid length to help resolve these issues. This was expanded on by Flemings et al. Still, the comparison of results is complicated by experimental uncertainties and a plurality of experimental procedures. This work seeks to resolve these issues through an analysis of experimental uncertainties present in existing fluidity tests and the development of an improved test and procedure which is very precise, accurate, and reliable. Certain existing tests and software packages have been shown to be unsuitable for quantitative fluidity measurement. Expressions for experimental uncertainty in fluidity testing have been derived. The capability to predict variations in fluidity as a function of alloy chemistry and other variables whose range of values are intrinsic to the economics of the process will help to more accurately determine the superheat needed for successful castings and will in turn lead to a decrease in scrap rates. This will enable metal casters to more reliably cast thin sections, and to reduce cycle time or scrap rate to achieve productivity goals. Superheat was shown to remain the dominant factor in fluidity, but the test allowed investigation of alloy modifications within an alloy specification in this alloy system. Factors known to have negative effects on structural properties were found often to have neutral or positive impacts on fluidity. A deep understanding of variations in fluidity measurements is the next necessary step in a century-long quest to understand how best to make metal castings through the use of fluidity experiments." 2008-12-16T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/422 https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1421&context=etd-dissertations Doctoral Dissertations (All Dissertations, All Years) Digital WPI Fred J. Major, Committee Member Jianyu Liang, Committee Member Makhlouf M. Makhlouf, Committee Member Richard D. Sisson, Jr., Department Head Diran Apelian, Advisor castability metal casting error analysis casting fluidity a356 solidification processing fluidity Metal castings Founding
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic castability
metal casting
error analysis
casting fluidity
a356
solidification processing
fluidity
Metal castings
Founding
spellingShingle castability
metal casting
error analysis
casting fluidity
a356
solidification processing
fluidity
Metal castings
Founding
Dewhirst, Brian A
Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
description "Tautologically, castability is a critical requirement in any casting process. The two most important factors impacting castability are the susceptibility of a metal to hot tearing and the degree of casting fluidity a material possesses. This work concerns itself with fluidity of molten metal. Since experimental investigations into casting fluidity began, researchers have sought to maximize fluidity through superheat, mold temperature, alloy chemistry, melt cleanliness, and mold design. Researchers who have examined the published results in the field have remarked on the difficulty of making quantitative comparisons and drawing conclusions from the data. Ragone developed a horizontal vacuum fluidity apparatus and an analytical expression for fluid length to help resolve these issues. This was expanded on by Flemings et al. Still, the comparison of results is complicated by experimental uncertainties and a plurality of experimental procedures. This work seeks to resolve these issues through an analysis of experimental uncertainties present in existing fluidity tests and the development of an improved test and procedure which is very precise, accurate, and reliable. Certain existing tests and software packages have been shown to be unsuitable for quantitative fluidity measurement. Expressions for experimental uncertainty in fluidity testing have been derived. The capability to predict variations in fluidity as a function of alloy chemistry and other variables whose range of values are intrinsic to the economics of the process will help to more accurately determine the superheat needed for successful castings and will in turn lead to a decrease in scrap rates. This will enable metal casters to more reliably cast thin sections, and to reduce cycle time or scrap rate to achieve productivity goals. Superheat was shown to remain the dominant factor in fluidity, but the test allowed investigation of alloy modifications within an alloy specification in this alloy system. Factors known to have negative effects on structural properties were found often to have neutral or positive impacts on fluidity. A deep understanding of variations in fluidity measurements is the next necessary step in a century-long quest to understand how best to make metal castings through the use of fluidity experiments."
author2 Fred J. Major, Committee Member
author_facet Fred J. Major, Committee Member
Dewhirst, Brian A
author Dewhirst, Brian A
author_sort Dewhirst, Brian A
title Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
title_short Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
title_full Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
title_fullStr Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
title_full_unstemmed Castability Control in Metal Casting via Fluidity Measures: Application of Error Analysis to Variations in Fluidity Testing
title_sort castability control in metal casting via fluidity measures: application of error analysis to variations in fluidity testing
publisher Digital WPI
publishDate 2008
url https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/422
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1421&context=etd-dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT dewhirstbriana castabilitycontrolinmetalcastingviafluiditymeasuresapplicationoferroranalysistovariationsinfluiditytesting
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