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ALUMINIUMTECHNOLOGIES Week3

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aluminium technologies

13.10.2015
fluxes
Flux salts

spent flux salts could be a


major source of problems

NaCl-KCL mixtures
Cover fluxes
Rafination fluxes
Drossing off fluxes
Wall cleaning fluxes
why do we need fluxes!
Oxidation ofmolten aluminium is inevitable!
Al2O3 ~ sv Al inclusions in suspension!
< sv Al inclusions float!
> sv Al inclusions sink!
Fluxing is essential in order to
to avoid the contact of aluminium melt with the
furnace atmosphere
to release inclusions in suspension and to improve
melt quality
to get a dry dross after skimming
to maintain clean furnace walls
Flux selection is critical!
Critical features of fluxes
melting point must be lower than that of Al
(660 C)! the lower the melting point of the
cover flux, the more efficient its use.
density must be lower than that of molten Al
(~2.3g/cm3)!
must be inert to furnace refractories!
vapour pressure must be low!
fluidity must be high!
must be recyclable!
must conform to the health-safety codes!
must be cheap!
issues of flux practice
fluxes immediately absorb atmospheric
moisture: damp fluxes do more harm than good!
Packaging is thus critical!
fluxes must be packaged in addition dose!
fluxes must be added in packages!
fluxes must never be exposed to the furnace
atmosphere)
Flux types
cover fluxes
drossing off fluxes
rafination fluxes
wall cleaning fluxes
Cover fluxes
must be liquid and must cover the melt in order to
avoid contact with the furnace atmosphere.
must melt at the operation temperature.
Tm Flux-dross layer mushy metal loss
wet (high Al content) dross
Tm Flux-dross layer liquid metal loss
flux inclusions
handling difficult!
the liquid flux layer protects the melt from
oxidation and hydrogen pick-up.
Cover fluxes
NaCl + KCl : (%44 + % 56)
binary eutectic : 645C
NaCl + KCl + NaF mixture
ternary eutectic : 607C
Cover flux must not be intermixed with aluminium
alloy melt!
Cover flux must be employed after all treatments
are over, for melt held for casting!
Binary and ternary mixtures are also ideal carriers!
Cover fluxes
KCl-NaCl
binary phase
diagram
Cover fluxes
Most fluxes contain sodium and it is possible for the
metal to pick up as much as 0.001% Na from them.
For most aluminium alloys the sodium has no effect or
is beneficial, but alloys containing more than 2% Mg
may become brittle with even trace amounts of
sodium, so they are treated with sodium-free fluxes.
Approximately 0.5% of the flux is put onto the solid
charge and a further 2% sprinkled evenly over the
surface when the alloy is fully molten.
When the flux becomes pasty or liquid at about 750C,
the flux is worked well into the melt with a bell
plunger for about 3 minutes.
Drossing off fluxes
a drossing-off flux is used to absorb oxides and
non-metallic material, cleansing the metal and
forming a good metal-free dross which can easily
be removed.
Drossing-off fluxes agglomerate the oxides allowing
easy removal from the surface of the melt.
They are used to remove the dross with the
mimimum metal loss (dry dross-pure in metal).
Typical ingredients:
NaCl + KCl (carrier) + KNO3 : (nitrate, sulfate,
carbonates) + fluorides
Drossing off fluxes
exothermic compounds thermite reactions
Q softening in the dross layer
frees trapped aluminium!
Exothermic fluxes ensure that liquid aluminium
trapped in the dross layer is returned to the melt.
Floride compounds : contributes to oxide metal
seperation owing to their high wetting capacity!
if added too much metal loss
if added too little softening effect
metal loss
Drossing-off before pouring
When the melt is ready for drossing-off, the flux is
spread over the metal surface, allowed to stand for a
few minutes until fused and then rabbled into the dross
for several minutes with a skimmer.
For best results the melt should preferably be above
700C although fluxes will function well below 650C.
doors are then closed and the burner is turned on for 10
minutes.
This helps to activate the flux, heating the dross and
giving good metal separation.
The dross is then pulled to the door, allowed to drain
and transferred to a dross bogie.
If the dross in the bogie is raked, further metal will
collect in the bottom.
Drossing-off before pouring
In reverberatory and shaft furnaces, the quantity
of flux needed will depend on the cleanliness of
the charge material and on the surface area of the
metal.
As a guide, it is recommended that an application
of 12 kg/m2 will suffice.
The behaviour of the flux will indicate whether
the dosage needs to be reduced of increased in
future applications.
Drossing-off before pouring
In crucible furnaces, when drossing-off is carried
out, the crucible sides are scraped and the required
quantity of the selected flux (250 g is normally
enough for the lift-out or bale-out furnace) is
sprinkled onto the metal surface along with the
existing flux cover and mixed into the surface of the
melt until a red-glowing dross is obtained.
This is exceptionally free of metal and can be
removed with a perforated skimmer.
Rafination/cleaning fluxes
they remove non-metallics from the melt by
trapping the oxide particles as they float out!
They help the oxides in suspension float,
employed continuously in rafination units
located in transfer systems or
in melting (or holding) furnaces
Typical ingredients:
NaCl + KCl (carrier) + Floride compounds (upto %20
Na3AlF6, CaF2, Na2SiF6)
Rafination fluxes
They penetrate between the oxide particles owing
to their low solubility and help to physically
seperate the oxide particles from the molten
metal!
They strip the oxide films on the molten metal
droplets and improve the metal recovery!
metal oxide interface energy is reduced and the
oxides are wet by the melt oxides in suspension
are removed from the melt while the aluminium
metal entrapped by the oxides return back to the
melt; aluminium and oxides are thus seperated
dry dross is skimmed off!
Rafination fluxes
if aded too much the fluidity of the flux is
impaired due to the high melting point of fluorides
metal loss
The most effective (yet the most expensive)
fluoride salt is: Na3AlF6
Addition practice: stir the flux into the molten
alloy!
wait for 5 to 10 minutes allow enough time
for oxides to float
dross is skimmed off!
Removal of Alkalines with Cl2/Ar
concentration (ppm)

Duration of fluxing (min)


Removal of alkalines
Removal of alkaline and alkaline earth metals
via flouride fluxing

via chlorine fluxing


Removal of Mg: demagging
Specialist flux for the removal of excess
magnesium from aluminium alloys.
DEMAGGER B is a magnesium removing flux
suitable for use with aluminium alloys where the
magnesium content is over specification. We
recommend using this product as manual flux.
Furnace-cleaning flux
Aluminium melting furnace linings become
coated with an oxide build-up and with time the
oxide content increases to form the hard
corundum phase.
Metal quality, cleanliness is adversely affected if
furnace refractories are not cleaned properly!
In this case refractories can be cleaned only
mechanically by crushing the corundum phase,
causing damage to the refractories.
Furnace-cleaning flux
The flux is mainly for application to the walls and
roof of reverberatory and rotary furnaces.
It can also be used for cleaning large transfer
ladles, if these can be independently heated.
The flux is not recommended for electric furnaces
with exposed elements because of the possibility
of element attack.
Furnace-cleaning flux
Furnace cleaning flux is a strongly exothermic
flux which attacks and strips oxide films.
Typical ingredients are:
NaCl + KCl (carrier) + Oxygen bearing exothermic
compounds (KNO3, Alkaline carbonates)
The heat generated and the stripping action
causes entrapped aluminium to melt and run
down to the furnace hearth.
Residues on walls are thus loosened and can be
removed more easily by scraping tools.
Furnace-cleaning flux
bath level is brought to a minimum (minimum
heel inside the furnace)!
The empty furnace is heated until the lining glows
red (800850C). the walls are sprayed evenly
with flux using a Flux Gun.
furnace doors are closed!
burners work full capacity for 10-15 minutes!
(walls are brought to the maximum possible
temperature to help to soften the corundum
layer!)
Furnace-cleaning flux
Then the walls are scraped clean off the softened
corundum layer.
The recovered metal is finally tapped.
A 10 tonne furnace will need about 25 kg of flux.
Furnaces should be treated weekly to prevent
accumulation of build-up.
The flux can be used when making a change of
alloy, to prevent contamination of the bath by
residues from the preceding charge.
Application once a week is recommended!
granulated fluxes
The formulations of fluxes have not changed for
many years, being based on powdered halides
including fluorides which are of concern
environmentally and which can reduce the life of
furnace refractories.
Attempts have been made to eliminate fluorides
completely from the flux formulations, but
unfortunately this rendered the flux ineffective.
The morphology of the flux was found to have a
major effect on its efficiency.
granulated fluxes
granulated fluxes have significant environmental
and technical advantages over the powder fluxes
and are rapidly replacing them.
Fluxes for aluminium contain chlorides and
fluorides which may give rise to potentially
harmful fumes in use on molten metal. Operators
must avoid inhalation of the fumes or dust.
Used flux must be disposed with care, referring to
the local authority or a specialist disposal
company.
granulated fluxes
granules powder
granulated fluxes
By using fluxes in granular form rather than as
conventional powders, the effectiveness of the
flux can be greatly increased, the handling
improved and the undesirable, hazardous
emissions can be significantly reduced.
The higher cost of granulated fluxes (arising from
the additional manufacturing process involved) is
compensated by the much reduced quantities
needed.
granulated fluxes
Conventional powder fluxes are used at more than
0.25% by weight of the metal being melted.
The granular material is used at only 0.125% by
weight so that emissions only half of normal might
be expected.
In fact, tests have shown fume reduction of more
than 85%.
the move from a powder to a granulated flux
significantly improves working conditions, reduces
the amount of waste material to be disposed of
and reduces attack on furnace refractories.
Characterization of fluxes
Mineralogical analysis :
the compounds in the flux are identified by x-ray
diffraction analysis.
The compounds
(fluorides, chlorides, etc)
identified in the XRD
spectrum of flux are
checked for their fitness
for the particular
application!
Characterization of fluxes
Mineralogical analysis :
the compounds in the flux are identified by x-ray
diffraction analysis. The compounds (fluorides, chlorides,
etc) identified in the XRD spectrum of flux are checked
for their fitness for the particular application!
Thermal Analysis :
The flux sample is melted inside a crucible and a
thermocouple is inserted into the melt. The flux is
allowed to cool. The variation of T with time is recorded.
The melting behaviour, the change in the viscosity of the
molten flux with temperature, the melting point/melting
range are estimated.
Characterization of fluxes
Moisture content :
the flux sample is weighed as received and after
drying in a laboratory oven to calulate the moisture
content:

weight as receivedweight after drying x100


weight as received
Characterization of fluxes
Analysis of the recovery capacity :
50 g foil (thickness 13m) fines are placed inside a
crucible.
It is covered completely with the flux to be analyzed.
Foil fines are melted under the flux.
Molten flux is decanted and the aluminium melt
underneath is poured on a cold plate to allow rapid
solidification.
The weight of the solid aluminium is measured (w).
w < 50g ; several solid beads
Modest rafination capacity
w ~50g ; single piece high rafination capacity
Characterization of fluxes
Katlama Aral : 520-585C
Nem Miktar : % 0,1
Geri Kazanm Verimi : % 86
Reclamation of swarf, skimmings
and turnings
A heel of metal is melted using heavy scrap or ingot and a
quantity of cover flux is added to form a fluid cover.
The amount of cover flux depends on the degree of dirtiness
and oxidation of the scrap and will vary between 1 and 5%.
The swarf, turnings etc. are fed through the flux cover a
little at a time, adding more flux as required to keep the
cover in a fluid condition.
The temperature of the melt is kept relatively low during
this procedure and when charging is complete, the heat is
raised to pouring temperature.
At this stage the flux may be poured off from rotary or
reverberatory furnaces but there is a significant advantage
to be obtained by passing more than one melt through the
same flux.
drossing
drossing
Poor melting and drossing practices lead to the
formation of dross rich in aluminium metal.
This type of dross is referred to as WET DROSS.
Dross with low metal content, DRY DROSS,
is obtained with sound
melting and drossing
methods.
Foundries must take
precautions to avoid
wet dross.
drossing
Dross removed from the furnace must be cooled
rapidly to avoid further thermite reactions that
lead to higher metal loss.
A simple practice to achieve this is to spread hot
dross over an inclined cold concrete surface.
Liquid aluminium trapped
inside the dross can flow
down over the surface and
become seperated.
There are other methods
which employ cooling
inside inert gas chambers.
Factors that affect dross features
Drossing temperature
Fluxing employed before drossing
Drossing off practice
method and the conditions under which dross is
cooled to room temperature
Dross cooling methods
Cooling in air
Rotary coolers
Cooling in argon gas
Dross presses
dross recycling
wet (white) dross dry (black) dross

Dross can amount up to 10% of the total yield.


Drosses are heterogeneous in both size and
chemistry.
Metal to be recovered may be between %10-70.
dross press
bath-melt mixing
Faster melting with less energy supply
Rapid alloying
Uniform chemistry throughout the bath
Uniform temperature distribution
Less oxidation loss

EMS
Melt mixing-homogenization
PMS
Permanent
magnetic
stirrers
Filtration
a melt can contain many non-metallic particles, films, or
clusters in sizes from a few ms to several mms.
Inclusions
are detrimental to the finished casting;
decrease mechanical properties,
increase the propensity to leak under pressure
reduce machinability.
Make casting difficult by reducing the fluidity.
Turbulence of the melt should be avoided since
aluminium oxidises very readily.
Turbulence leads to folding in of oxides and creation of
new oxides from exposure of clean aluminium to the
atmosphere.
impurities to be filtered
Al2O3 (particularly when the fraction of scrap in
charge is high!)
Spinels (MgAl2O4 and MnAl2O4)
Al4C3 (comes from primary ingot and scrap-
returns contaminated with oil, painted scrap)
Nitrides
Refractory particles from eroding, worn furnace
refractories
Fe-Mn-Cr intermetallic compounds: tolerance to
Fe and Mn in pressure die casting is high!)
Advantages of fitration
Clean aluminium melt
High fluidity, better feeding, quality casting
Clean casting structure
Superior mechanical properties (UTS, yield
strength, fatigue and creep resistance)!
Elongation and ductility is particularly high; often
twice as much!
Better surface-shiny surface
Anodising quality is higher!
Fewer pinholes in foils; tearing in foil production
reduced; foil yield is high!
filtration
Filtration practice and filter type depends on the
requirement of melt cleanliness and casting quality
Filter types
Fiberglass textile filters
alumina ball filters
ceramic foam filters
bonded particle filters
rigid cartridge filters
Filtering mechanims
cake filtering : foam filters
Deep bed filtering : cartridge filters
Textile filters
fiberglass textile filters are used in the case of not so
critical products

me Pore size (mm2) Open area (%)


25 17.16 65
36 11.56 63
50 7.49 55
100 2.72 47
200 1.71 43
400 0.45 27
Alumina ball filtration
Bed (box) filters manufactured from alumina balls
Alumina balls are placed in a ceramic box; the size
variation of the balls produce a variety of pore
dimensions. The pore size is not constant.
Alumina ball filtration
Ceramic foam filters
Foam filters are produced from either sintered
or cast alumina.
Porosity is identified by the number of pores
per inch length (ppi). Typical PPI values: 20,
30, 40, 50, 60, 65 and 80 ppi.
They donot lead to blockage problems with %80-
85 porosity but filtering efficiency in this case is
poor.
Hence,improvement in mechanical properties
with foam filtering is limited.
Ceramic foam filters
Ceramic foam filters are used when the
cleanliness of the casting is of interest.
Filtration in melt transfer
Filtration during casting
Filtration of aluminium alloy castings
To counter this it is usual to cast aluminium using
non-pressurised systems;
for example 1:2:4 (sprue:runner:gate area) so that
metal front velocities are minimised.
The introduction of ceramic foam filters to the
aluminium industry in the 1970s was a major
advance.
The foam filter has a tortuous path through its
body which traps inclusions allowing clean,
smooth-flowing metal to enter the mould cavity.
By the 1980s most aerospace parts and many high
integrity automotive parts were filtered.
Cleaning effect and flow
smoothing of foam filters

Turbulent flow smooth flow

metal flow
SIVEX FC filters
Because of the filters high surface area, even
particles smaller than the size of its pores can be
captured and retained in the depth of the filter.
The foam structure also provides smooth, non-
turbulent metal flow, so that oxide formation
during mould filling is reduced.
This allows simplification of gating systems,
providing significant cost savings through yield
improvement.
Use of filters in conventional
running systems
Initially, there is a delay while the filter is primed;
no flow occurs until sufficient pressure is created
by a suitable head of metal, an initial surge of
metal is then observed, followed by a steady flow
until filter blockage occurs.
The running system must be designed to fill the
mould cavity before the blockage stage is reached.
The presence of the filter ensures that the lower
part of the sprue and part of the runner bar are
filled before metal begins to flow, thereby avoiding
turbulence and air entrapment.
Schematic pattern of flow through a
ceramic foam filter

Typical filter print for horizontal filter


position.

Typical filter print for vertical filter position


Filtration during casting
Pouring cup
Pouring cup Vertical runner
supporter filter
filter Horizontal runner
Mould joint

nstallation in pouring cup horizontal installation in


vertical runner
Pouring cup Pouring cup
Vertical runner Vertical runner

Horizontal runner Horizontal runner


filter
filter Mould joint
Mould joint

Horizontal installation in horizontal runner vertical installation in


horizontal runner
Direct pouring with filters
direct pouring into the top of a mould cavity offers:
improved yield
simplified sprue, gating and feeding design
reduced fettling costs
However, direct pouring introduces defects due to the
turbulent flow of the metal in all but the simplest of
castings.
In addition, the impingement of high velocity metal streams
caused erosion of moulds or cores.
These objections can be overcome by pouring the metal
through a ceramic foam filter situated at the base of the
sprue.
Clean metal, free from turbulence and oxide, fills the
mould cavity and helps to feed the casting through the
filter.
Direct pouring with filters
Directional solidification and casting soundness is promoted
and gates are unnecessary.
The impingement problem is reduced because the metal
velocity is reduced as it passes through the filter.
The unfiltered castings show a few, but very significant,
low strength test pieces which microscopic examination of
fracture surfaces showed to be due to oxide inclusions.
No such low strength test pieces are seen with the filtered
test pieces.
Filtration effectively removes the oxide inclusions.
Remarkably, the test bars top poured through a ceramic
foam filter gives consistently better mechanical properties
than filtered bottom-filled castings.
Direct pouring with filters

turbulent flow

A schematic view of the


cleaning and flow-
smoothing effect of
pouring directly through a
filter unit.

laminar flow
Bonded particle ceramic filters
Manufactured from alumina and
silicon carbide.
They are strong and resistant to
chemical attacks.
Pore fraction is lower than foam
filters: %40
Filters made of SiC offer effective
heating owing to a high thermak
conductivity.
Uninterrupted pore configuration
provides a difficult flow pattern
Filtration-rigid media
Rigid media filters are used when the cleanliness
of the as cast structure is critical as in magnetic
disks and very thin foil.
These filters can only be used during the transfer
of the melt to the casting station.
Filtration-rigid media
Cartridge filters must be employed after the
degasser. Inclusions are trapped on the surface
and inside of the filter tubes.
This is achieved by stagnation precipitation and
allows the removal of solid reside much smaller
than the pores of the filters.
Filtration mechanisms
cake Deep bad
Grain refinement
Grain refining
improves hot tear resistance,
reduces the harmful effects of gas porosity
(giving pressure-tight castings) and
redistributes shrinkage porosity in aluminium
alloys.

The grain size of a cast alloy is dependent on


the number of nuclei present in the liquid metal
as it begins to solidify and
on the rate of undercooling.
A faster cooling rate promotes a smaller grain size.
Grain refinement
Additions of certain elements to aluminium alloy
melts can provide nuclei for grain growth.
Titanium, particularly in association with boron,
has a powerful nucleating effect and is the most
commonly used grain refiner.
Titanium alone, added at the rate of 0.020.15%
as a master alloy, can be used but the effect
fades within 40 minutes.
The addition of boron together with titanium
produces finer grains and reduces fade.
Grain refinement why ?
fine, equiaxed and unfirm grain strcuture improves
the soundness and quality of the casting:
dendrite coherency occurs at higher solid
fractions!
the feeders stay molten longer!
better feeding and mould filling!
less shrinkage

Fs0.3 Fs0.6
Grain refinement why ?
Fine grains // small intergranular porosity
small/dispersed porosity

microsegregation = f(grain size)


less segregation//shorter homogenization
superior surface quality
better responseto anodising and
other finishing operations
Grain refinement - why ?
superior mechanical properties
isotropy
high yield strength
ductility
high fatigue resistance

efficient casting process


limited hot tearing!
lower scrap rates!
reliable and efficient!
Grain refinement - why ?
better response to heat treatment and finishing
operations
(higher formability:
forging/rolling/extrusion)
easy to homogenize: short HT cycles
easy to solutionize: shorter SHT cycles
faster age hardening

high quality component


efficient-economic process
Grain refinement how ?
dn/dt dr/dt Fine grains

dn/dt dr/dt Coarse grains


r
Grain refinement how ?
dn/dt
Effective nuclei:
Stable in the melt / not soluble!
High crytallographic epitaxy with -Al (>90%)
Similar density to -Al: ekirdek Al

TiAl3: soluble < 1500ppm Ti / 97.8%


TiB2: insoluble / 95.7%
AlB2: soluble < 220ppm B / 96.5% (Ti,Al)B2

TiC for special circumstances!


Grain refinement how ?
dr/dt
Balance between latent heat and heat transfer is
critical!
Latent heat released during solidification =
f(partioning of alloying elements).
Partioning of alloying elements at the
solidificiation front (liquid-solid interface)
restricts growth!: growth restriction (GRF)

elem. Mn Cu Fe Mg Ni Cr Si Ti
GRF 0.1 2.8 2.9 3.0 3.3 3.5 5.9 246
Desing of a commercial grain refiner
High nucleation rate low growth rate

effective nuclei growth restrictor


TiB2 excess Ti

Al-%1-10Ti-%0.2-3B
Al-5Ti-1B rod :
2.2Ti (TiB2 insoluble )
2.8Ti (TiAl3 soluble) Al3Ti

TiB2
Commercial grain refiners
Grain refining
AlTi5B1wrought alloys
before after addition / holding time (min)
addition 2 5 10 15 30

Before addition 2min after addition


cont./semi-cont. vs shape casting
continuous characteristic shape
casting casting
low Undercooling before high
solidification
short Time from inoculation to long
solidification
high Alloy chemistry-purity low
low Alloy composition-Ti high
content
wrought ?XXX Alloy content casting ?XX
cont/semi-cont vs shape casting
Foundry alloys high levels of Si
fluidity / castability
shrinkage
hot tearing
density
mechanical properties
Si > %3;
Si + Ti Ti-Si compounds: Si poisoning
Al3Ti and TiB2 particles / efficiency is impaired!
Grain refining capacity / fading ( fluidity)
Grain refining of foundry alloys is DIFFICULT!

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