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Casting: "Net Shape" or "Near-Net Shape" Process Advantages

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The key takeaways are the advantages and disadvantages of different casting processes as well as design considerations like minimizing porosity and achieving directional solidification.

Some advantages of casting include producing near-net shape parts with few steps while disadvantages include expensive molds and potential issues with shrinkage and porosity.

Porosity in castings can be minimized by designing the part and mold to reduce turbulence, avoiding overheating the melt, using scavenging agents or gases, and pouring smoothly.

Casting

“Net Shape” or “Near-Net Shape” Process Advantages:


• Product is ~finished right out of mold.
• High complexity with few steps (usually)
• No machining waste

General Casting Disadvantages:


• Expensive and time-consuming patterns/molds/dies
• Solidification issues: shrinkage, porosity, ~low strength, brittleness
• Some methods require many steps (e.g., Investment casting)

Expendable vs. Non-Expendable:


• Patterns
• Molds
Casting: Solidification

• Grains perpendicular to wall shut-off


other grains, so columnar structure
naturally develops perpendicular to mold
wall. Kalpakjian
• Grain boundaries tend to be weak 
columnar castings tend to be brittle (unless
loaded parallel to the column direction, as
in turbine blades).
• Equiaxed structure usually preferred for
strength, can be achieved with
innoculating agents and/or fast cool.

Kalpakjian
Casting Impurities
Slag/dross:
• Metal oxides that form brittle inclusions within casting
• Slag floats, so skim off top and/or pour from bottom of ladle

Porosity: trapped gas. Minimize by these methods:


• Design part and mold to minimize turbulence of molten metal as it enters mold
• Don’t overheat the molten metal (dissolves more gas)
• Melt in a vacuum ($$$)
• Melt in a protective atmosphere ($$)
• Use scavenging agents to collect gas bubbles
• Pour smoothly (sand casting, permanent mold casting, )
• Pressurize the “pour” (die casting)
Casting: Design Practices
• Draft angle (1-3 deg) is needed to allow
removal of pattern from mold (sand casting), or
removal of part from mold (e.g, die casting)
• Upon solidification, thicker sections tend to
form cavities inside unless fed by riser or
directionally solidified.
• Aim for the same wall thickness everywhere or
plan solidification direction carefully.
• Offset intersection of ribs to achieve uniform Kalpakjian
thickness.

Kalpakjian
Kalpakjian
Casting:
Directional Solidification

• Porosity and cavities form when melt


cannot reach solidifying/contracting
regions.
• Chills used to initiate local solidification Kalpakjian
and achieve directional solidification away
from the chill.
• Risers feed melt opposite to
solidification direction.

Schey
Sand Casting: Parts of a Sand Mold (expendable mold)
Key terms:
Flask, Cope, Drag, Sprue, Runner, Gate, Riser, Mold Cavity, Core, Parting Line,
Draft (not shown).

Kalpakjian
Casting: Riser Design

Chvorinov’s Rule
• Solidification time = B * (V/A)n
• B = mold constant
• n = 1.5 – 2.0
• V = volume of casting
• A = surface area of casting

Riser and mold cavity: Schey


• Want riser to supply molten metal to mold cavity as casting solidifies
• Riser must solidify after casting: T-riser = 1.25 * T-casting
• Mold constant is the same for riser and casting
Sand Casting: Patterns

DeGarmo
Shell-Molding Process

DeGarmo
Investment Casting
• aka “Lost-wax” casting
• Unlimited design freedom since
draft angles, cores, parting lines, etc.,
are ~irrelevant
• Accurate parts with good surfaces
• Many steps
• Patterns and molds are expendable
• Expensive

Kalpakjian
Investment Casting a Turbine Rotor

Kalpakjian/Howmet Corp
Wax pattern Cut-away of Cut-away Finished
of turbine rotor ceramic mold showing turbine rotor,
applied over wax melted near-net shape
over wax pattern out of mold.
(Metal then
poured into mold.)
Turbine Blade Casting

Kalpakjian
Directional Directional Single-crystal
solidification solidification
blade with a
for single-
crystal blade spiral attached
Single Crystal Silicon “Boule”

Directionally solidified from bottom


to top as a single crystal (no grain
boundaries anywhere).

Silicon wafers cut from the boule,


made into semiconductor devices
(microchips, solar cells, etc.)

Kalpakjian
Permanent Mold Casting
• No pattern is needed, saving time and cost
• Mold is machined directly out of cast-iron (adding time and cost)
• Mold complexity is limited, 2-3 deg draft angles needed
• Molten metal is gravity fed into mold
• Good dimensional accuracy and surface finish
• Castings cool quickly so strength tends to be good
• Molds last 10,000 – 100,000 parts if casting a soft metal (aluminum, zinc)
• Special graphite molds ($$) may be made for casting steel parts (unusual)

www.aurorametals.com

www.offshoresolutions.com
Permanent Mold Casting: Aluminum piston

Risers

As cast After machining

Kalpakjian
Die Casting
• Molten metal is injected under pressure (2000-30000psi) into mold
• Mold machined from tool steel ($$$ and time)
• Molds last ~100,000 parts
• Difficult to modify once made
• Very accurate dimensions, excellent surface finish, intricate details
• Aluminum and zinc most commonly cast (steel would erode mold)
• Aluminum melts at ~1050F, Zinc at ~700F
• Both are ~brittle when diecast
• Part size is limited by injection cylinder size (20 lb max) and clamping force (P*A)
• No risers needed (hi-pressure runners feed metal)
• Slides/cores used to make holes parallel to parting line
• Air is vented along parting line, but porosity is often a problem
• Very fast production rates possible, fastest of any casting method
• Expensive dies/molds and machines: only suitable for mass production
Die Casting Advantages
• High volume at high speed
• Duplicates intricate design details
• No pattern
• Long mold life: ~100,000 cycles
www.incastinc.com

www.aluminum.org
www.kurt.com
Die Casting Limitations
• Complex and large machinery: expensive
• Molds (dies) machined from hardened tool steel: expensive
• Molds cannot take extreme heat so “melt” limited to low-melting point
alloys: zinc, copper, aluminum, and zinc-aluminum alloys.
• Effects of high pressure  limited part size

samkwangprecision.en.ec21.com

www.atplonline.com
Die Casting:
Hot-Chamber
Process:
zinc alloys

Kalpakjian
Die Casting: Cold-Chamber Process: aluminum alloys

Kalpakjian
Toggle mechanism
- Separating force = Pressure * Area = 400 to 4000 tons (800,000 – 8,000,000 lb)
- As in Vise-grip, toggle multiplies clamp force many times. Double Toggle.
- Keeps die-halves from separating, minimizing “flash”

(a)

Kalpakjian

NADCA
Die (Mold) Design
- alignment pins
- “slides” make holes perpendicular
to die-separation direction.

www.toolingtec.com

www.toolingtec.com

www.toolingtec.com
Die Casting:
part and runners

NADCA
Porosity in Castings

- Turbulent injection entraps air


- Many solutions but still a common problem

NADCA

www.vidisco.com www.eng.ysu.edu
Explosion Risk
Water trapped under hot metal 
Water expands to steam (1500x volume) 
Explosion and spray out of the furnace 
Possible secondary explosion
Avoid water near a casting operation

NADCA
Costs Comparison for Different Casting Processes

Kalpakjian
References

DeGarmo: E.P. DeGarmo et al, Materials and Processes in Manufacturing, Wiley, 2003.
Schey: J.A. Schey, Introduction to Manufacturing Processes, McGraw-Hill, 2000.
Kalpakjian: http://www.nd.edu/~manufact/index3.htm
NADCA: North American Die Casting Association Introduction to Die Casting CD

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