Three-Dimensional Numerical Study of a Low Head Direct Chill Slab Caster for Aluminum Alloy AA5052

Author(s):  
Mainul Hasan ◽  
Latifa Begum

A 3D numerical study is carried out for a vertical direct chill (DC) rolling ingot caster for an aluminum alloy (AA-5052). The model incorporated the coupled turbulent melt flow and solidification aspects of the casting process. The caster consists of a low-head hot-top mold. The melt is assumed to have been delivered through the entire top cross section of the caster. The previously verified in-house computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code is used to investigate the effects of the important parameters such as casting speed, inlet melt superheat, and mold-metal contact effective heat transfer coefficient (HTC) on the low-head casting process. It is found that the sump depth (SD), liquid depth, and mushy thickness (MT) at the center of the ingot increase linearly with the casting speed while the shell thickness (ST) at the exit of the mold decreases linearly with the casting speed. Useful correlations concerning the above quantities with casting speed have been provided for the benefit of DC casting operators.

Author(s):  
Mainul Hasan

The present study is undertaken to model an industrial-sized vertical Direct Chill (DC) slab caster fitted with a porous filter near the melt entry region. The modeled alloy is a high strength aluminum alloy AA-2024 which is extensively used by the aerospace industry. The model has incorporated the 3-D turbulent aspect of the melt flow and heat transfer in the liquid sump and the mushy region solidification aspect of this long solidification range (136° C) alloy. The verified 3-D turbulent CFD in-house code is used to study the effects of various parameters of this casting process in order to gain some fundamental understanding of the melt flow and solidification behavior of the process. The studied caster consists of a popular ‘hot-top’ mold fitted with a porous filter above which molten aluminum alloy is delivered with a constant flow-rate across the entire hot-top. Because of two-fold symmetry, a quarter of the domain of the caster is modeled to save computational costs and time. A staggered control volume based finite-difference scheme is used to solve the non-dimensional modeled equations and the associated boundary conditions. The turbulent aspect of the flow in the porous filter is modeled using the latest suggested version of the Brinkman-Forcheimer extended form of Darcy equation for a porous media. The turbulent melt flow and solidification heat transfer in the clear fluid region are modeled using a low Reynolds number version of the k–ε eddy viscosity model. Computed results for the steady-state phase of the casting process are presented for four casting speeds, varying from 100 to 220 mm/min, for three metal-mold contact regions, varying from 20 to 50 mm and for three metal-mold convective heat transfer boundary conditions, varying from 1.0 to 4.0 kW/m2K and all for a fixed inlet melt superheat of 64° C. The permeability of the filter is also varied to ascertain its influence on the predicted results. Computed results of the velocity and temperature profiles, the sump depth and mushy region at the centre of the caster as well as the solidification shell thickness at the exit of the mold are provided and discussed. The present work can provide some useful guidelines in designing and optimizing a vertical DC slab caster for producing good quality casts for the common aluminum alloy AA-2024.


2011 ◽  
Vol 189-193 ◽  
pp. 3785-3788 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Feng Zhu ◽  
Zhi Hao Zhao ◽  
Xiang Jie Wang ◽  
Jian Zhong Cui

7075 aluminum alloy ingot with the diameter of 100 mm has been produced by horizontal direct chill casting in different casting speed. The effect of casting speed on the sump profile and the ingot surface quality was studied by sump profile observation. It was found that increasing the casting speed results in the deepening of the liquid pool, the adding of segregation knots and the reducing of cold shouts in the ingot surface. It is also found that the depth of the liquid pool is directly proportional to the casting speed and the squared radius of the ingot.


Author(s):  
Mainul Hasan ◽  
Latifa Begum

In this study, first a 3-D thermal model is developed for an open top, vertical direct chill (DC) casting process of rolling slabs (ingots) by taking into account the casting speed in the form of slag flow in the thermal connective-diffusion equation. The mushy region solidification characteristics of the process are accounted for through the implementation of the enthalpy porosity technique. The thermal model is later extended to a 3-D CFD model to account for the coupled turbulent heat transfer and solidification aspect of the process. Both models simulate an industrial-sized, hot-top type vertical Direct Chill (DC) slab caster for high strength aluminum alloy AA-7050. A staggered control volume based finite-difference scheme is used to solve the modeled equations and the associated boundary conditions. In the CFD model, the turbulent aspects of flow and solidification heat transfer are modeled using a low Reynolds number version of the k–ε eddy viscosity approach. Computed results for the steady-state phase of the casting process are presented for four casting speeds varying from 60 to 180 mm/min for a fixed inlet melt superheat of 32°C. Simulation results of the velocity and temperature fields and heat fluxes along the caster surface are presented for the CFD model and the shell thickness and sump depth are compared between the CFD and thermal models.


2009 ◽  
Vol 79-82 ◽  
pp. 1269-1272
Author(s):  
Wei Chen ◽  
Bao Xiang Wang ◽  
Yu Zhu Zhang ◽  
Jin Hong Ma ◽  
Su Juan Yuan

In this paper, a three-dimensional finite element model is developed to simulate and analyze the turbulent flow in the mould of billet continuous casting. The result shows that if the SEN is used in the continuous casting process, there exists a symmetrical stronger vortex in the middle of the mould and a weaker vortex above the nozzle. The casting speed, the depth and diameter of SEN all have significant effect on the fluid flow field and the turbulent kinetic energy on the meniscus, and then have effect on the billet quality. At the given conditions, the optimum set of parameters is: the casting speed 0.035 , the depth of the SEN 0.1 , the diameter of the SEN 0.025 . Online verifying of this model has been developed, which can be proved that it is very useful to control the steel quality and improve the productivity.


2007 ◽  
Vol 561-565 ◽  
pp. 3-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joon Yang Chung

Continuous casting is the essential process converting liquid steel to solid in the form of slabs or billets/blooms in the steel plant. The economy and quality of the steel products are greatly dependent on how successfully the continuous casting is performed. New technologies have been actively developed in the process during the last decades in order to increase the productivity and, therefore, to decrease the operational cost. Since its first commissioning of a slab caster in 1976, POSCO has constructed a number of continuous slab, bloom and billet casters including a thin slab caster not only for plain carbon steels but for stainless steels. Through the operation of various types of continuous casters for more than 30 years so far, POSCO has steadily developed fundamental technologies and operational know-how and achieved the equipment innovations to improve the surface and internal qualities of cast products as well as to extend the productivity of continuous casters. Furthermore, POSCO has deepened the basic understanding on the solidification phenomena of liquid steel and also accumulated the engineering backgrounds to design the most optimal continuous casters. It has also devised the indispensable and auxiliary equipments and the key technologies to control the process precisely and efficiently in order to guarantee the quality and productivity. An innovative technology under development is the POCAST process, where controlled amount of the pre-molten mold flux instead of conventional powder mold flux is continuously fed into free surface of molten steel through the plunger-type feeding system from the flux melting furnace. In order to prevent the molten flux from freezing at the meniscus, a reflective insulation cover is installed, leading to the suppression of thermal radiation from the molten steel and flux. It is generally understood that, as casting speed increases, the occurrence of breakout increases since mold lubrication becomes insufficient due to the lack of mold flux flow from the meniscus into the solid shell/mold boundary. However, by utilizing the especially composition controlled pre-molten flux, it becomes possible to eliminate the formation of slag bear in the mold. Therefore, the mold flux consumption rate is increased even at the reduced oscillation rate & stroke and more importantly, the mold flux infiltration becomes more uniform throughout the boundary between the mold and the solidified shell. This consequently results in drastic reduction of the formation and depth of the oscillation mark and the occurrence of surface hooks without increasing the possibility of breakout, as has been proved in the casting trials carried out with the 10 ton pilot slab caster in Pohang. A key trend in the development of the continuous casting process is to reduce the thickness of cast products. Examples include thin slab casting and strip casting. In the thin slab casting process, a major drawback is the relatively low casting speed and, as a result, the inefficient equipment layout in the plant where two casters are connected to a hot rolling unit. The drawback could be resolved if the casting speed exceeds a certain limit. At the high casting speed, the productivity of casting becomes equivalent to that of hot rolling, and the thin slab casting plant is to be designed so that one strand


2015 ◽  
Vol 817 ◽  
pp. 3-7
Author(s):  
Xing Han ◽  
Bo Shao ◽  
Hai Tao Zhang ◽  
Ke Qin ◽  
Jian Zhong Cui

With the cladding casting equipment, which was self-designed and self-made, 4045/3003 composite ingot, which is in size of Φ140mm/Φ110mm, has been manufactured by direct cooling continuous casting by adjusting and optimizing the technological parameters. The process was investigated involving macro-morphology and microstructure near the interface between the two different aluminum alloys at different positions, and distributions of both components and hardness of the cladding ingot. In addition, the tensile strengths were tested. The results showed that metallurgical bonding of two different aluminum alloys could be obtained by direct-chill semi-continuous casting process. The diffusion layer, which is about 15μm on average, has formed on the two sides of composite interface during casting process. From the side of 4045 aluminum alloy to the side of 3003 aluminum alloy, the Si content has a trend to decrease, as well as the hardness, while the Mn content has a trend to increase gradually. Tensile strength of the coated ingot reaches 117.3MPa, which is higher than the core-material matrix (3003 aluminum alloy), indicating the bonding of the two alloys belongs to metallurgical bonding.


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