Method of Making Metal Objects by Casting
20190126509 ยท 2019-05-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C1/186
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B2235/3427
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22C1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B28B3/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B2235/3218
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/5436
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/349
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C04B2235/6026
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22C9/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B28B1/001
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y70/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02P10/25
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B28B1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A 3D printer creates a ceramic casting shell of high accuracy. Casting molten metal into this shell creates an accurate metal object. The ceramic shell is formed from a paste made from a low hardness ceramic, dried by freeze drying. To overcome the shear thinning behaviour of ceramic pastes a positive displacement pump is in close proximity to the nozzle.
Claims
1. A method of using a 3D printer for creating ceramic shells used in casting metallic objects, method comprising the steps of: creating a paste comprising of a ceramic powder, a binder and water, extruding the said paste via a nozzle fed from a positive displacement pump, said pump located in proximity to the nozzle, moving said nozzle in three dimensions relative to a three dimensional casting shell created from the extruded paste, drying the casting shell using freeze drying, and using the dry shell as a casting shell for metal casting.
2. A 3D printer for printing ceramic casting shells from a water based ceramic paste using an extrusion nozzle and a positive displacement pump located in close proximity to the nozzle, said ceramic material having a hardness of less than 5 on the Mho scale, and said shell being freeze dried after printing.
3. A method as in claim 1 wherein the supports needed in the process of printing the ceramic shell are made of a ceramic material which is weaker than the shell material.
4. A method as in claim 2 wherein the supports needed in the process of printing the ceramic shell are made of a ceramic material which is weaker than the shell material.
5. A method as in claim 1 wherein the supports needed in the process of printing the ceramic shell are made of a ceramic material of a different color than the shell material.
6. A method as in claim 2 wherein the supports needed in the process of printing the ceramic shell are made of a ceramic material of a different color than the shell material
7. A method as in claim 1 wherein the shell is made from a ceramic powder, binder and water while the support material is made from a ceramic powder and water.
8. A method as in claim 2 wherein the shell is made from a ceramic powder, binder and water while the support material is made from a ceramic powder and water.
9. A method as in claim 1 wherein the ceramic material is talc.
10. A method as in claim 1 wherein the ceramic material is magnesium oxide.
11. A method as in claim 1 wherein the binder is sodium silicate.
12. A method as in claim 1 wherein the binder is aluminum oxide hydroxide.
13. A method as in claim 1 wherein the binder is an organic polymer.
14. A method as in claim 1 wherein the binder is a phenolic resin.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0003]
[0004]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0005] Referring to
[0006] In order to avoid shrinkage and distortion during drying of object 7, freeze drying is used. This is a commercial process combining fast freezing at a very low temperature (about 50 degrees C.) followed by applying a vacuum to sublimate the water and slowly heating the drying part to accelerate the drying. Commercial freeze dryers suitable for current invention are readily available, their typically used to dry food. Well known suppliers are Labconco Corp (USA) and Harvest Right (USA).
[0007] When freeze drying is used, the process can be accelerated by keeping the area above build table 8 at a low temperature, preferably sub zero, by blowing chilled air at the nozzle or other means, e.g. placing the complete machine in a refrigerated chamber. It is possible to generate different resolutions from a single nozzle. The reason it is possible to generate a different deposited line width from the same nozzle size is that the deposited line diameter is a function of two parameters: flow rate and relative motion speed between nozzle and object. A slow motion and a high flow rate will create a thick line, as a large amount of material is deposited per unit length. A low flow and high motion speed will generate a thin deposited line, as needed for high resolution. The flow rate is controlled by the metering pump 5. While
[0008] Sometimes novel properties can be achieved by co-deposition of materials. For example, interleaved deposition of two reactive materials, such as a ceramic paste and an activator fluid. This can be handled by multiple nozzles. Also, several nozzles allow deposition of several types of ceramic pastes without needing to clean the nozzle.
[0009] The details of the nozzle and pump are shown in
[0010] The preferred embodiment uses a vane pump but many other types of positive displacement pumps can be used, such as a swash-plate pump, a progressive cavity pump, a peristaltic pump or any other type of small flow high pressure positive displacement pump.
[0011] When the shell 7 has horizontal surfaces a support structure 26 is usually needed. The preferred method uses a separate feeder, pump and nozzle for the support material. The art of automatically designing the supports is well known in 3D printing. It is desired that the ceramic materials used for the shells should have the following properties: [0012] 1. Low cost, as the shell is discarded and cost of most parts must remain low. [0013] 2. Low hardness, in order not to cause wear in the nozzles. [0014] 3. High temperature and high thermal shock capability. For non-ferrous metals such as aluminum, brass, bronze, gold, silver, copper etc the shell must withstand about 1200 deg C. for a short time. For steel, stainless steel and titanium the shell must withstand 1800 deg C. for a short time. [0015] 4. Controlled strength. The shell must be strong enough to withstand the hydrostatic pressure of the molten metal but weak enough to be easily removed from the finished casting by cracking (for outside surfaces) and breaking up or sandblasting for inner passages or cavities. [0016] 5. Low toxicity, as it is desired to be able to discard the broken shells as landfill or any other unrestricted disposal.
[0017] It was found that to meet these requirements it is best to use material with a Moh scale hardness below 6, and preferably below 3. It was also found out that for best results the ceramic paste should comprise a base material, water, a binder and a lubricant. The binder can be organic, inorganic or a mixture of both. It was also found out that adding water increases be porosity of the shell after drying, which is highly desirable for a casting shell as the hot gasses created in the casting process can escape. The best base materials were found to be Talc (Moh hardness of 1), Kaolin (Moh hardness of about 2.5) and Magnesium oxide (Moh hardness of about 5.8). The best inorganic binders were Sodium Silicate, Potassium Silicate, Aluminum Oxide Hydroxide and Vee Gum (Magnesium Aluminum Silicate). The best organic binders were Arabic Gum, Poly Vinyl Acetate, Poly Vinyl Alcohol and water based Phenolics. The lubricant is added is small quantities to prolong pump life. Out of the large number of possible ceramic materials the following three gave the best results:
[0018] For Non-Ferrous Castings: [0019] 1. Talc+1 part Sodium Silicate+2 parts water. The talc is added to the solution until a thick paste is created. Paste has to be thick enough to form free standing walls of several centimeters. The talc is fine particle talc, with average particle size of 3 um. Talc used was Cimpact 699 supplied by the Imrys corporation. Average particle size is 3 um. After paste is mixed 1% to 5% of machine oil is added as a lubricant and paste re-mixed, preferably in a vacuum mixer. Any type of lubricating oil can be used, a highly volatile oil is preferred.
[0020] This ceramic is best under 1000 deg C. but for small castings that cool rapidly it can be used to 1200 deg C. [0021] 2. 38% Talc+13% Vee Gum+4% Sodium Silicate+40% water+5% SAE20 motor oil. Same preparation instructions as #1.
[0022] For Ferrous and Other High Temperature Castings: [0023] 1. Magnesium Oxide (nanoparticles or micron range particles)+Aluminum oxide hydroxide, AlO(OH) added until a thick paste is formed, add 1-5% motor oil as a lubricant. [0024] 2. 28% Kaolin+23% ball clay+1% Poly Vinyl Alcohol+1% AlO(OH)+1% Gum Arabic+42% water+4% motor oil as lubricant. [0025] 3. 1 part Magnesium Oxide nanoparticles (20-100 nm size range)+2 parts Talc+water to form a thick paste, add 1-5% motor oil as lubricant. [0026] 4. 1 part Magnesium Oxide nanoparticles (20-100 nm size range)+2 parts Kaolin+water to form a thick paste, add 1-5% motor oil as lubricant. [0027] 5. 10 parts Kaolin+1 part Phenolic binder+water to form a paste. The water soluble phenolic binder is made by the Plenco corporation (USA), add 1-5% motor oil as lubricant. [0028] 6. 10 parts Magnesium Oxide+1 part Phenolic binder+water to form a paste. Add 1-5% motor oil as lubricant.
[0029] For a Support Structure than can be Easily Removed after Drying:
[0030] Talc powder with water added to form a thick paste (no binders used), optionally add 1-5% motor oil as lubricant.
[0031] The above formulations can be used as casting shells right after drying or can be baked to increase strength. Baking is typically done at temperatures of 200 to 500 degrees C. Higher temperature baking can be used to further increase strength but some dimensional changes may occur.
[0032] When the system is used to make permanent ceramic parts harder ceramic materials such as alumina or Zirconia can be used, mixed with water to form a paste and about 1% to 10% of binder such as Poly Vinyl Alcohol. Such parts are sintered at high temperatures (1500 to 2000 degrees C.) after drying to achieve full strength. This process is well known.
[0033] The shells made had a wall thickness from 1 to 30 mm, however walls are build up similar to corrugated cardboard, with significant air spaces incorporated inside wall.
[0034] The internal inserts in the mold (to create cavities) can be built up with large voids in order to speed up clean-out and reduce cost as well as reduce drying times.
[0035] The 3D printing process allows adding periodic pinholes in the shell, which helps gasses escape. The surface tension of the metal normally prevents the molten metal from filling these pinholes. The molten metal entering the pinholes solidifies because of the low heat capacity of the minute amount of metal. The pinholes are typically from 0.1 mm to 1 mm. The shell can be made as one piece, similar to an investment casting shell, from several pieces similar to shell moulding or from several pieces plus inserted cores. The different pieces can be held together during the casting process or bonded together, after drying, with the same ceramic paste used to make them or a specialized bonding paste having a higher concentration of binders. Other ceramic adhesives can be use as well for bonding shells parts.
[0036] A complete fabrication system may comprise a 3D printer 10 generating a casting shell 7. Shell 7 is moved (manually or automatically) to a freeze dryer having a vacuum tight chamber. A fan can be used to blow chilled air from this chamber to 3D printer 10 before the vacuum is applied. After drying the shell can be moved (manually or automatically) to casting station. Filling shell 7 from bottom instead of top offers some advantages, as known in the art of foundry work.