Vacuum Arc Remelting Furnaces
Vacuum Arc Remelting Furnaces
Vacuum Arc Remelting Furnaces
Prior to start up, the electrode to be melted is loaded into the furnace. For Consarc pioneered in Automatic Melt Controls in the early 1970’s. At
specialty steels and superalloys, the electrode is previously cast in air or that time, before personal computers, melt rate was maintained using
vacuum. For primary reactive metals like titanium, the electrode is fabricated programmable calculators while operators adjusted the arc gap by changing
F from compacted sponge and/or scrap, or from a hearth melt process like the furnace reference voltage settings. 35 years later, Consarc is on its 7th
A
(-) Plasma or Electron Beam. Generation of Automatic Melt Controls.
Two major mechanical assemblies combine to form the vacuum vessel in The Generation 7 Automatic Melt Controls are a full SCADA system (System
which melting occurs - the movable furnace head and the fixed melt station. Control And Data Acquisition) consisting of a PLC, a separate dripshort
E
The movable furnace head is the upper section of the vessel. An integral processor, and a Personal Computer interface. The PLC controls the
ram assembly connected to a highly sophisticated servo drive supports and furnace logic functions and sequencing along with processing all of the
G controls the movement of the electrode. The water-cooled ram extends melt rate calculations. The dripshort processor continuously measures the
through a vacuum seal in the head and the electrode clamps to its lower instantaneous short circuits created by the melting metal dripping from the
B extremity thus becoming the cathode of the arc melting operation. The fixed electrode tip to the ingot top. The drip shorts are classified into 15 categories,
melt station, which forms the lower half of the vacuum vessel, consists of each of which can be used in the control algorithm to maintain the arc gap.
a removable copper crucible that is placed into a fixed stainless steel water The PC serves as the Human Machine Interface (HMI) to the furnace allowing
jacket. components like vacuum and water pumps to be controlled, remelt profiles to
be created and stored, and furnace data to be logged, stored, and analyzed.
Once the electrode is clamped to the ram assembly the ram lifts the
C electrode while furnace head is lowered to create a vacuum seal on top of The Generation 7 remelt profile separates the melt into 3 segments – Ramp
the crucible. Once a vacuum is established, the DC power supply is activated Up, Main Melt, and Hot Top. Each segment can be further broken into up
and the control system automatically strikes a high current arc between the to 10 sequences offering a nearly unlimited ability to customize and fine
H
consumable electrode (cathode -) and the crucible base (anode +) which tune the remelt profile. Once the remelt profile is accepted, the operator
quickly forms a molten pool of metal. initiates the Autostrike sequence. The control system automatically positions
(+) the electrode, turns on the power supply, and strikes the initial arc starting
The gap between the melting electrode and metal pool (arc gap) is precisely the melt sequence. The entire melt progresses automatically through the
maintained and a controlled melt rate is established. The metal droplets segments until the hot top alarm weight is reached and the operator is
falling through the arc gap are exposed to the vacuum environment and the prompted to turn off the power supply.
D extreme temperatures of the arc zone. This causes removal of dissolved
gasses, vaporization of tramp elements, and improvement in oxide Full data logging is provided for all measured and setpoint data including
cleanliness. vacuum levels, power input, current, voltage, melt rate, ram travel, ram
speed, water flows, water temperatures, alarms and errors. The software
A Arc Zone Because of the water-cooled crucible, the molten pool of metal formed by the allows analysis by graphing multiple logged values at user selected time
B Water Jacket metal droplets is solidified in a directional fashion. When the melt rate and intervals. This allows a detailed look into the melt and is invaluable for
C High Velocity Guide arc gap are correctly controlled this directional solidification prevents macro process analysis and optimization.
D Water In segregation and reduces the amount of micro segregation thereby enhancing
E Water Out the material properties of the solidified ingot.
F Electrode
G Crucible Towards the end of the process the power is gradually reduced providing a
H Ingot controlled hot top maximizing the yield of useful product.
The traditional Thyristor SCR power unit utilizes a series of 3 line reactors and two phase shift transformers
to feed the rectifier stage. DC rectification is accomplished using water cooled SCR assemblies rather
than diodes. This allows the output current to be controlled by the fast acting SCR’s instead of the VRT’s
(Saturable Reactors).
30,000 amps The DC section of either type of power unit is the same. For twelve pulse operation, an inter-phase
transformer is provided to connect between leading and lagging rectifier sections. A DC current shunt is
provided in the output for accurate current monitoring and feedback control. A single ripple reactor is used
to limit the ripple voltage to five (5) peak to peak volts over the current range from 10% to 100% of full rated
load. This provides a smoother power delivery to the electrode promoting increased stability at the arc
zone. Additionally, fused power factor correcting capacitors for correcting the full load power factor up to
0.9 lagging can be provided with each power supply.
The power supply components are located inside a completely enclosed NEMA 12 fabricated steel
enclosure. Windows and lights are provided for visual observation of the various components within
the power supply cabinets. Access to the power supply system is through front opening doors that are
interlocked to provide intrinsically safe operation. For the benefit of maintenance personnel, lighting and
a power tool outlet are provided in the interior of the enclosure.
50,000 amps
Power units are available with VAR furnace systems or as stand alone replacements for existing VAR
furnaces.
Advantages of Consarc VAR furnaces A Consarc Reactive Metals Vacuum Arc Remelting (RVAR) Furnace is a precision machine
specifically designed and built for the remelting of reactive metals such as Titanium.
The Consarc VAR process overcomes serious problems that have been historically associated with conventional VAR operations. Problems such
as strong magnetic fields in the electrode melt area that cause uncontrolled metal stirring, uneven solidification, and alloy segregation. For Primary Melt Furnaces the material to be melted is initially formed by welding low density
Imprecise positioning of the electrode that compromised ingot reproducibility and in the case of titanium, system safety. Consarc has developed titanium sponge or scrap ‘compacts’ into an electrode under an inert protective atmosphere.
and implemented solutions to all of these problems. Solutions that have proven their worth through years of field use. Primary electrodes are especially long for a final given ingot weight due to their inherently
low density. This requires that the Primary Melt RVAR furnace have extensive ram travel
Some Features of the Modern Consarc VAR Furnace are: and head lift to accommodate such long, low density electrodes. This fact demands special
design parameters to be considered if inordinately high furnace structures are to be avoided.
• Melt uniformity by coaxial design: Our furnaces provide coaxial current paths that close Primary Melt Furnace The Consarc Primary Melt RVAR with its column design allows the ram drive and head lift to
the electrical circuit for the cathode-anode current. collapse on one another minimizing the overall furnace height while maximizing the head and
• Quality control by X-Y axis electrode positioning: Remote TV viewing and adjustable ram travel available.
electrode positioning is used to achieve and maintain centering within the melt chamber.
• Precision melt control via load cells: These high accuracy sensors continuously monitor For Secondary / Tertiary Melt Furnaces, the electrode to be melted has previously been
electrode weight through out the melting process. Optimum melting conditions are melted either by a hearth process, like Plasma or Electron Beam, or by a Primary Melt RVAR.
maintained by the automated system control. The electrode is essentially fully dense so the extensive ram and head lift travels of Primary
• Consistent yield from electrode to ingot through load cell based hot topping: Consarc furnaces are not required. However, due to titanium’s potentially explosive nature, the RVAR
incorporates the process of hot topping into the end of the melt cycle. It enhances designed for titanium requires extensive safety considerations.
reproducibility and is fully automated, eliminating the need for operator intervention.
• Ease of operation through full automation: Once the VAR melt is initiated by the All Consarc RVAR’s have a variety of safety features. Argon gas purged, resealing,
operator, the process is fully automated to the completion of the hot top overpressure relief valves are standard to vent overpressure while maintaining an inert
• Reliability assured by proprietary power supply (Reactor or Thyristor based): Consarc environment. High flow, emergency, argon backfill is provided to maintain an inert
designs and produces power supplies to meet the exact requirements of the specific Secondary Melt Furnace environment even in the case of a furnace breach. The ram drive and control system is
melting application. The VAR power source is a rugged, water-cooled, DC power supply. provided with a series of limits to prevent the arc gap from opening up too far, possibly
allowing the arc to strike to the crucible wall rather than the ingot surface. Finally, Consarc
Furnace Configurations insists that all RVAR furnaces are placed within protective concrete bunkers which are closed
during furnace operation.
Consarc’s VAR furnaces are available in the following standard sizes as well as custom sizes to meet any customer requirements.
RVAR furnaces also require the electrode stubs to be welded to the electrode under vacuum.
DESCRIPTION 24” (600 mm) VAR 28” (700 mm) VAR 36” (900 mm) VAR 42” (1050 mm) VAR
The standard Consarc RVAR allows the stubs to be welded in situ, however this utilizes
Maximum Ingot Weight 6,000 kg 9,000 kg 16,000 kg 27,000 kg valuable furnace time for welding rather than remelting. To overcome this, Consarc offers an
adjunct to its RVAR furnaces – a Vacuum Stub Welder. The Vacuum Stub Welder is a plunge
Maximum Crucible Diameter 610 mm 711 mm 914 mm 1075 mm welder consisting of a vacuum chamber, stub clamp and drive, DC power supply, vacuum
Crucible Flange Diameter 36” 44” 49.5” 60”
system, and plunge control system. Once the electrode is inside the vacuum chamber, the
stub connected to the drive, and the vacuum established, a DC arc is struck between the
Power Supply Rating 12,000–15,000 amps 15,000–20,000 amps 20,000–25,000 amps 25,000–30,000 amps Vacuum Stub Welder bottom of the stub and top of the electrode. Once a pool of metal forms, the stub is plunged
into the pool creating a full penetration weld of the stub to the electrode.
Maximum Ram Travel 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm)
Maximum Head Lift 50” (1270 mm) 50” (1270 mm) 50” (1270 mm) 54” (1370 mm)
Advantages of Consarc VAR furnaces A Consarc Reactive Metals Vacuum Arc Remelting (RVAR) Furnace is a precision machine
specifically designed and built for the remelting of reactive metals such as Titanium.
The Consarc VAR process overcomes serious problems that have been historically associated with conventional VAR operations. Problems such
as strong magnetic fields in the electrode melt area that cause uncontrolled metal stirring, uneven solidification, and alloy segregation. For Primary Melt Furnaces the material to be melted is initially formed by welding low density
Imprecise positioning of the electrode that compromised ingot reproducibility and in the case of titanium, system safety. Consarc has developed titanium sponge or scrap ‘compacts’ into an electrode under an inert protective atmosphere.
and implemented solutions to all of these problems. Solutions that have proven their worth through years of field use. Primary electrodes are especially long for a final given ingot weight due to their inherently
low density. This requires that the Primary Melt RVAR furnace have extensive ram travel
Some Features of the Modern Consarc VAR Furnace are: and head lift to accommodate such long, low density electrodes. This fact demands special
design parameters to be considered if inordinately high furnace structures are to be avoided.
• Melt uniformity by coaxial design: Our furnaces provide coaxial current paths that close Primary Melt Furnace The Consarc Primary Melt RVAR with its column design allows the ram drive and head lift to
the electrical circuit for the cathode-anode current. collapse on one another minimizing the overall furnace height while maximizing the head and
• Quality control by X-Y axis electrode positioning: Remote TV viewing and adjustable ram travel available.
electrode positioning is used to achieve and maintain centering within the melt chamber.
• Precision melt control via load cells: These high accuracy sensors continuously monitor For Secondary / Tertiary Melt Furnaces, the electrode to be melted has previously been
electrode weight through out the melting process. Optimum melting conditions are melted either by a hearth process, like Plasma or Electron Beam, or by a Primary Melt RVAR.
maintained by the automated system control. The electrode is essentially fully dense so the extensive ram and head lift travels of Primary
• Consistent yield from electrode to ingot through load cell based hot topping: Consarc furnaces are not required. However, due to titanium’s potentially explosive nature, the RVAR
incorporates the process of hot topping into the end of the melt cycle. It enhances designed for titanium requires extensive safety considerations.
reproducibility and is fully automated, eliminating the need for operator intervention.
• Ease of operation through full automation: Once the VAR melt is initiated by the All Consarc RVAR’s have a variety of safety features. Argon gas purged, resealing,
operator, the process is fully automated to the completion of the hot top overpressure relief valves are standard to vent overpressure while maintaining an inert
• Reliability assured by proprietary power supply (Reactor or Thyristor based): Consarc environment. High flow, emergency, argon backfill is provided to maintain an inert
designs and produces power supplies to meet the exact requirements of the specific Secondary Melt Furnace environment even in the case of a furnace breach. The ram drive and control system is
melting application. The VAR power source is a rugged, water-cooled, DC power supply. provided with a series of limits to prevent the arc gap from opening up too far, possibly
allowing the arc to strike to the crucible wall rather than the ingot surface. Finally, Consarc
Furnace Configurations insists that all RVAR furnaces are placed within protective concrete bunkers which are closed
during furnace operation.
Consarc’s VAR furnaces are available in the following standard sizes as well as custom sizes to meet any customer requirements.
RVAR furnaces also require the electrode stubs to be welded to the electrode under vacuum.
DESCRIPTION 24” (600 mm) VAR 28” (700 mm) VAR 36” (900 mm) VAR 42” (1050 mm) VAR
The standard Consarc RVAR allows the stubs to be welded in situ, however this utilizes
Maximum Ingot Weight 6,000 kg 9,000 kg 16,000 kg 27,000 kg valuable furnace time for welding rather than remelting. To overcome this, Consarc offers an
adjunct to its RVAR furnaces – a Vacuum Stub Welder. The Vacuum Stub Welder is a plunge
Maximum Crucible Diameter 610 mm 711 mm 914 mm 1075 mm welder consisting of a vacuum chamber, stub clamp and drive, DC power supply, vacuum
Crucible Flange Diameter 36” 44” 49.5” 60”
system, and plunge control system. Once the electrode is inside the vacuum chamber, the
stub connected to the drive, and the vacuum established, a DC arc is struck between the
Power Supply Rating 12,000–15,000 amps 15,000–20,000 amps 20,000–25,000 amps 25,000–30,000 amps Vacuum Stub Welder bottom of the stub and top of the electrode. Once a pool of metal forms, the stub is plunged
into the pool creating a full penetration weld of the stub to the electrode.
Maximum Ram Travel 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm) 70” (1778 mm)
Maximum Head Lift 50” (1270 mm) 50” (1270 mm) 50” (1270 mm) 54” (1370 mm)
The traditional Thyristor SCR power unit utilizes a series of 3 line reactors and two phase shift transformers
to feed the rectifier stage. DC rectification is accomplished using water cooled SCR assemblies rather
than diodes. This allows the output current to be controlled by the fast acting SCR’s instead of the VRT’s
(Saturable Reactors).
30,000 amps The DC section of either type of power unit is the same. For twelve pulse operation, an inter-phase
transformer is provided to connect between leading and lagging rectifier sections. A DC current shunt is
provided in the output for accurate current monitoring and feedback control. A single ripple reactor is used
to limit the ripple voltage to five (5) peak to peak volts over the current range from 10% to 100% of full rated
load. This provides a smoother power delivery to the electrode promoting increased stability at the arc
zone. Additionally, fused power factor correcting capacitors for correcting the full load power factor up to
0.9 lagging can be provided with each power supply.
The power supply components are located inside a completely enclosed NEMA 12 fabricated steel
enclosure. Windows and lights are provided for visual observation of the various components within
the power supply cabinets. Access to the power supply system is through front opening doors that are
interlocked to provide intrinsically safe operation. For the benefit of maintenance personnel, lighting and
a power tool outlet are provided in the interior of the enclosure.
50,000 amps
Power units are available with VAR furnace systems or as stand alone replacements for existing VAR
furnaces.
Prior to start up, the electrode to be melted is loaded into the furnace. For Consarc pioneered in Automatic Melt Controls in the early 1970’s. At
specialty steels and superalloys, the electrode is previously cast in air or that time, before personal computers, melt rate was maintained using
vacuum. For primary reactive metals like titanium, the electrode is fabricated programmable calculators while operators adjusted the arc gap by changing
F from compacted sponge and/or scrap, or from a hearth melt process like the furnace reference voltage settings. 35 years later, Consarc is on its 7th
A
(-) Plasma or Electron Beam. Generation of Automatic Melt Controls.
Two major mechanical assemblies combine to form the vacuum vessel in The Generation 7 Automatic Melt Controls are a full SCADA system (System
which melting occurs - the movable furnace head and the fixed melt station. Control And Data Acquisition) consisting of a PLC, a separate dripshort
E
The movable furnace head is the upper section of the vessel. An integral processor, and a Personal Computer interface. The PLC controls the
ram assembly connected to a highly sophisticated servo drive supports and furnace logic functions and sequencing along with processing all of the
G controls the movement of the electrode. The water-cooled ram extends melt rate calculations. The dripshort processor continuously measures the
through a vacuum seal in the head and the electrode clamps to its lower instantaneous short circuits created by the melting metal dripping from the
B extremity thus becoming the cathode of the arc melting operation. The fixed electrode tip to the ingot top. The drip shorts are classified into 15 categories,
melt station, which forms the lower half of the vacuum vessel, consists of each of which can be used in the control algorithm to maintain the arc gap.
a removable copper crucible that is placed into a fixed stainless steel water The PC serves as the Human Machine Interface (HMI) to the furnace allowing
jacket. components like vacuum and water pumps to be controlled, remelt profiles to
be created and stored, and furnace data to be logged, stored, and analyzed.
Once the electrode is clamped to the ram assembly the ram lifts the
C electrode while furnace head is lowered to create a vacuum seal on top of The Generation 7 remelt profile separates the melt into 3 segments – Ramp
the crucible. Once a vacuum is established, the DC power supply is activated Up, Main Melt, and Hot Top. Each segment can be further broken into up
and the control system automatically strikes a high current arc between the to 10 sequences offering a nearly unlimited ability to customize and fine
H
consumable electrode (cathode -) and the crucible base (anode +) which tune the remelt profile. Once the remelt profile is accepted, the operator
quickly forms a molten pool of metal. initiates the Autostrike sequence. The control system automatically positions
(+) the electrode, turns on the power supply, and strikes the initial arc starting
The gap between the melting electrode and metal pool (arc gap) is precisely the melt sequence. The entire melt progresses automatically through the
maintained and a controlled melt rate is established. The metal droplets segments until the hot top alarm weight is reached and the operator is
falling through the arc gap are exposed to the vacuum environment and the prompted to turn off the power supply.
D extreme temperatures of the arc zone. This causes removal of dissolved
gasses, vaporization of tramp elements, and improvement in oxide Full data logging is provided for all measured and setpoint data including
cleanliness. vacuum levels, power input, current, voltage, melt rate, ram travel, ram
speed, water flows, water temperatures, alarms and errors. The software
A Arc Zone Because of the water-cooled crucible, the molten pool of metal formed by the allows analysis by graphing multiple logged values at user selected time
B Water Jacket metal droplets is solidified in a directional fashion. When the melt rate and intervals. This allows a detailed look into the melt and is invaluable for
C High Velocity Guide arc gap are correctly controlled this directional solidification prevents macro process analysis and optimization.
D Water In segregation and reduces the amount of micro segregation thereby enhancing
E Water Out the material properties of the solidified ingot.
F Electrode
G Crucible Towards the end of the process the power is gradually reduced providing a
H Ingot controlled hot top maximizing the yield of useful product.