Dr. Chaitanya Sharma Phd. Iit Roorkee
Dr. Chaitanya Sharma Phd. Iit Roorkee
Dr. Chaitanya Sharma Phd. Iit Roorkee
(ME-202)
Overview of
Casting
Processes
Keywords:
Casting
• Most widely used casting process, accounting for a
significant majority of total tonnage cast
• Nearly all alloys can be sand casted, including metals with
high melting temperatures, such as steel, nickel, and
titanium
• Castings range in size from small to very large
• Production quantities from one to millions
Open mould
closed mould
Moulding
2. Machine moulding-
are used for simple castings to be produced in large
numbers. Ramming is done by machine so require
less time.
Desirable Mold Properties
• Strength - to maintain shape and resist erosion
Fig: (a) Core held in place in the mold cavity by chaplets, (b) possible chaplet design, (c)
casting with internal cavity.
Core Parts
• A core consists of two portions:
– The body of the core and
– one or more extensions called prints
• The body of the core is surrounded by molten metal
during casting process.
• Body of core has all the features which are required in
final internal surface (e.g. hole) of the castings.
• The prints are necessary to support the core in the
mould.
• They also conduct the heat (and gases produced by a sand
core) to the mould.
Core, Core Print & Core Box
CORE: sand body that is
inserted into the mold to
produce the internal features
of a casting, e.g. holes.
Smooth surface.
• Discontinuities in castings
that exhibit a size, shape,
orientation, or location that
makes them detrimental to
the useful service life of
the casting
• Some casting defects are
remedied by minor repair
or refurbishing techniques,
such as welding
• Other casting defects are
cause for rejection of the
casting.
Casting Defects:
Metallic Projections
• Fins are excessive amounts of metal created by
solidification into the parting line of the mold.
Fins are removed by grinding or sandblasting.
• Swells are excessive amounts of metal in the vicinity of
gates or beneath the sprue.
• Scabs are surface slivers caused by splashing and rapid
solidification of the metal when it is first poured and
strikes the mold wall.
Casting Defects:
Cavities
– Blowholes and pinholes are holes formed by gas entrapped
during solidification
– Shrinkage cavities are caused by lack of proper feeding or
non-progressive solidification and have a rougher shape.
Porosity is pockets of gas inside the metal caused by micro-
shrinkage, e.g. dendritic shrinkage during solidification.
Casting Defects:
Discontinuities
• Cracks in casting and are caused by hot tearing, hot cracking,
and lack of fusion (cold shut)
– A hot tear is a fracture formed during solidification
because of hindered contraction
– A hot crack is a crack formed during cooling after
solidification because of internal stresses developed in the
casting
– Lack of fusion is a discontinuity caused when two streams
of liquid in the solidifying casting meet but fail to unite
Rounded edges indicate poor contact between various metal
streams during filling of the mold
Casting Defects:
Defective Surfaces
• Casting surface irregularities that are caused
by incipient freezing from too low a casting
temperature
• Wrinkles, depressions and adhering sand
particles
Casting Defects:
Inclusions
• Particles of foreign material in the metal matrix
• The particles are usually nonmetallic compounds but
may be any substance that is not soluble in the matrix
– Slag, dross, and flux inclusions arise from melting
slags, products of metal treatment, or fluxes
They are often deep within the casting
– Mold or core inclusions come from sand or mold
dressings and are usually found close to the surface
Gating System
Manufacturing,
Engineering &
TYPES OF GATES
• Top gate
Manufacturing,
Engineering &
Fluid Flow & Solidification Time
p v2
Bernoulli’s theorem h constant
g 2g
A1 h
Sprue design 2
A2 h1
vD
Reynolds number Re
Volume n
Chvorinov’s Rule Solidification time = C
Surface Area
Casting Design
P1 v12
v1A1 h1 F1
g
q hc As (Ts To )
v2A2
P2 v22
h2 F2
g
Solidification of Casting
1. Caines Method
2. Modulus Method
3. NRL Method
CAINES METHOD
• Caines equation
Where
X = Freezing ratio
Y = Riser volume / Casting volume
A, b and c = Constant
Freezing ratio
Constant For Caines Method
Example
Modulus Method
• Modulus is the inverse of the cooling characteristic ( surface
area/ Volume) and is defined as
Modulus = Volume / Surface area
• In steel casting riser with height to diameter ration of 1 is
generally used.
• Surface area =
FIGURE 5.35 Various types of (a) internal and (b) external chills (dark areas at corners), used in castings to
eliminate porosity caused by shrinkage. Chills are placed in regions where there is a larger volume of metal,
as shown in (c).