On the assessment of the quality of casting nonferrous small-size parts by numerical simulation.
Deac, Cristian ; Bibu, Marius ; Petrescu, Valentin 等
1. INTRODUCTION
The casting of small-size metallic parts, such as components of
dental or bone prostheses, has become, in the last few years, a very
important element in the activity of many specialized companies and even
of many medical and technical laboratories.
This particular type of casting involves a high degree of precision
and is very demanding in its execution, given the fact that parts often
have wall thicknesses in the range of tenths of millimetres, the imposed
tolerances being also very tight, sometimes in the range of [+ or -]
0,05 ... [+ or -] 0,1 mm (Deac V. et al., 1995).
This makes any quality problem in a part, even if it would seem
insignificant in terms of size, to still become a major issue and the
cause for an immediate rejection of that part.
Therefore, it is of critical importance for the manufacturers of
such parts to be able to predict the outcome of a casting operation in
terms of quality. This is however complicated by three factors: the
variety and complexity of the shapes that need to be cast, the variety
of available commercial casting materials and not least the variety of
available technologies and equipments (Deac C., 2003).
It is thus no longer possible to rely on one's experience or
on simple techniques used for determining a material's castability
that in turn would give a clue on whether problems would or not appear
in a cast part. The development of numerical simulation and modelling
techniques and software can be of great help here. However, currently
there are very few casting simulation software packages designed
specifically for small parts, and they are much more expensive than
software designed for the industrial casting of large parts.
Therefore, starting from the analysis of the defect types that
might occur, and from their importance in castings, the authors of the
present paper tried to determine whether an industrial casting
simulation software can be customised and used for the accurate
prediction of quality issues in small-size cast parts, i.e. whether a
system designed primarily for the relatively large tolerances of
industrial cast parts can be used also for small-size applications..
2. THE QUALITY OF CAST PARTS
Given the small-batch or often even unique part production style
employed for the casting of small-size parts, very often the producers
use the traditional "lost wax" technique for realising these
elements. This technique implies realising a model of the part in a
wax-like material, covering it with a so-called investment material,
heating the assembly until the wax melts and then casting the metallic
alloy in the resulting mold inside the investment material (Deac V,
1995).
The notion "quality of the cast parts", which refers to
the presence or absence in the cast parts of defects such as pores,
shrinkage holes etc., is strongly related to the notion of
"castability" of the material of which the parts are made. The
latter can refer to both the completeness of the casting, in the sense
of the cast part proportion which could be correctly reproduced during
the casting process, and to the casting precision, i.e. to the minimal
dimensions of the details which could be reproduced. This explains also
the different categories of casting defects that need to be taken into
consideration in quality assessments. These categories are (Marxkors,
1999):
--Investment defects, related to the components of the casting
system. The main causes for this type of problems are:
--secondary runners of inadequate length or diameter, or too many
secondary runners connected to an under-dimensioned intermediate runner.
--an oversized or undersized casting cone, or a casting cone that
is not exactly aligned with the main runner;
--strangled runners or strangled connections between runners;
--uncontrolled forming and hygroscopic expansion rate of the
investment material, and differences to the metal's expansion rate
etc.;
--Pores, determined by the existence of gas bubbles, initially
dissolved in the molten metal, that remain trapped in the metallic mass
during its cooling and solidification. The main causes for the
occurrence of pores in a cast part are:
--inadequately dimensioned sprue and/or inadequately dimensioned
gas removal runners;
--overheating of the molten metal before the actual casting;
--the presence of residual gases in the casting area;
--a too large casting pressure;
--a casting area that is too cold when casting starts.
The area with the highest probability to generate pores is the
junction between the casting pattern (model) al sprue, although pores
could be found also in the casting part itself. Actually, as proven by
several casting experiments and also by the speciality literature,
porosity is the main problem in small-size cast parts.
--Incomplete castings, related also to the problem of
under-dimensioning. Among its main causes, we can cite:
--an insufficient amount of material used for melting and casting;
--the metallic material was not heated to the optimal casting
temperature, or there was a too long delay between the moment of
reaching of this temperature and the moment of the actual casting;
--the molten alloy starts flowing from the casting cone into the
sprue before the actual casting force (e.g. centrifugal force) sets in;
--the casting mould contains gases but there are no gas evacuation
runners etc.
3. THE NUMERICAL SIMULATION OF CASTING SMALL-SIZE PARTS
All elements listed above have to be taken into account when
manufacturing a small-size part by casting, but at the same time, if we
want to be able to correctly predict the outcome of a casting operation
from the point of view of quality, we need to use a proper simulation
software which can take all these problems into account.
Although in the last few years there have been some attempts to use
numerical modelling techniques for a better understanding or even
solving of aspects related to the melting and casting of dental alloys,
by using software packages like MAGMASOFT, FLUENT or JSCAST, there has
been no systematic approach to the usage of computer-aided modelling and
simulation software for the optimisation of the design of small-size
casting moulds (Wu, 2002; Bernad et al., 2002).
The authors of this study have focused on the software package
MAGMASOFT, developed by the company MAGMA GmbH from Aachen, Germany and
meant for the use with relatively large parts from the
machine-manufacturing industry.
The parts included in the simulation were simplified crowns, of
cylindrical shape and with cylindrical cavities. From the
software's materials database, the base metal alloy Fe-Cr-Ni type
SA-6NM / ASTM A743 was chosen, with following characteristics:
--chemical composition: 0.07 % C; 1 % Si; 1.5 % Mn; 13 % Cr; 4.25 %
Ni; 0.7 % Mo; remainder Fe;
--melting point: 1467[degrees]C;
--casting temperature 1630[degrees]C.
The discretisation process carried out with the simulation software
has led to a mesh consisting of 998.944 elements.
In order to assess the influence of the various factors, several
simulations were run, aiming at realising three identical parts at once,
using different values for the casting pressure, protective atmosphere
pressure and nature, mould temperature, as well as different design
layouts for the sprue and patterns in the mould and various investment
material types.
Several output types were obtained and analysed, including the
part's porosity, the temperature distribution in the parts (which
could indicate a problem in the dimensioning of the runners etc.).
Figures 1 and 2 present the assessment of porosity by simulations
carried out for two different sprue designs.
It can be seen that, when using a sprue that allows the direct
feeding with molten metal of each part, the porosity level is reduced
and pores tend to form mostly in the sprue, rather than in the cast part
itself. This is confirmed by experimental castings.
However, when comparing the simulation result with that of actual
castings of the parts (figure 3), beneath an obvious similarity, several
"fineness" differences were noticed, caused most likely by the
lack of sufficient precision in the simulation software. This is
understandable given the actual usage domain of the employed software,
which is the casting of large parts, where a difference of a tenth of a
millimetre, for example, does not play a significant role.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Therefore, it can be concluded that the usage of an unspecialised,
unmodified simulation software cannot lead to a correct assessment of
the quality-related problems in small-size cast parts. After modifying
some of the software parameters, it was nevertheless possible to obtain
a satisfactory result.
5. CONCLUSIONS
The researches described in this paper have proven that it is
possible to predict the occurrence of quality-related problems in
small-size parts obtained by casting. However, the appropriate program
parameters have to be carefully tuned to the actual conditions, in order
to obtain the desired precision.
The future researches will target a more detailed part modelling
(e.g. more closely resembling a dental crown) and the realising of
broader researches, aimed at developing a mathematical model that could
be used for example to predict the position and precise size of pores
inside a future cast part.
6. REFERENCES
Bernad, S.I, Susan-Resiga, R., Muntean, S. (2002) Fluent Numerical
Simulation of the Mold Filling Process for Titanium Dental Casting
Applications, Southeastern Europe FLUENT Users Group Meeting,
Thessaloniki, Greece, 2002
Deac, C. (2003) Contributii la dezvoltarea tehnologica a topirii si
turnarii unor materiale metalice utilizate in tehnica dentara.
(Contributions to the technological development of melting and casting
some metallic materials used in dental technics). Ph.D. thesis,
"Lucian Blaga" University of Sibiu, 2003.
Deac, V. et al. (1995) Turnarea titanului in protetica
dentara" (Casting of Titanium in Dental Prosthetics). Editura
Universitatii din Sibiu, Sibiu.
Marxkors, R. (1999) Ursachen, Auswirkungen und Behebung von
Misserfolgen (Causes, effects and repairing of problems). Deutsche
Zahnarztliche Zeitschrift, vol. 54, nr. 7, p. 600-610.
Wu, M. et al. (2002) Numerical simulation of the casting process of
titanium removable partial denture frameworks. Journal of Materials
Science: Materials in Medicine, vol. 13, p. 301-306.