Frangible-soluble casting cores and methods of making the same
12070793 ยท 2024-08-27
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22C1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B22C9/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22C1/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The casting material may be formed around the casting core using a variety of conventional casting techniques including direct liquid metal infiltration, pressure assisted casting, and centrifugal casting among others.
Claims
1. A method of forming a component, comprising: forming a core comprising a core material, the core comprising a plurality of segments, the plurality of segments comprising a surface, a porosity of between 20% and 60%, the plurality of segments having a length between any two segment connection points and a width, the ratio of length between any two segment connection points to width having a ratio of less than 10:1; heating a cast material to form a heated cast material; casting the heated cast material around and in direct contact with the core, wherein the heated cast material has a thickness around each segment of the plurality of segments that is at least equal to the width of each segment; cooling the heated cast material whereby the difference in the coefficients of thermal expansion between the cast material and the core material causes the cast material to apply pressure to the core causing the core to fracture to form a fractured core; and removing the fractured core to form a plurality of connected passageways within the component; wherein the thermal expansion coefficient of the core is at most 80% that of the cast material.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the core material is selected from the group consisting of ceramics, plastics, resins, solid salts, minerals, and refractory metal alloys.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the core material is a ceramic.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the ceramic is selected from the group consisting of alumina, silica, magnesium oxide and chromite.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the thermal expansion coefficient of the core material is at most 80% that of the cast material.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the cast material is a metal alloy.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein removing the fractured core is by a core removal process selected from the group consisting of mechanical flushing, dissolution, flushing by a liquid, wherein the liquid contains particles, and extrusion honing.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the surface of the plurality of segments has no porosity.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(12) The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein: rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
(13) The present disclosure is directed to casting systems and methods that include casting cores designed to crush under a specified amount of strain applied to the core in the casting process. In particular, molten metal forming the desired part is cast at low pressure around a frangible casting cores, and as high thermal strain is applied to the core from the article/block during the cooling process due to dissimilar rates of thermal expansion, the casting cores break, crack, crush or otherwise fracture, hereafter collectively referred to as fracture, into smaller pieces to facilitate removal of the casting core material.
(14) The casting material may be formed around the casting core using a variety of convention casting techniques including direct liquid metal infiltration, pressure assisted casting, and centrifugal casting among others.
(15) The present disclosure is also directed to casting methods that utilize the disclosed novel cores, arrangements and processes to form cast components. The cast component may be any suitable component casting that includes small, complex internal passages. In an embodiment, cast components may include, but are not limited to heat exchangers, chemical reactors, injection molding dies, engine blocks, rocket nozzle injector plates, and assemblies of components in a single article such as a complete chemical unit process including heat exchangers, filters, mixers, etc. In an embodiment, the casting cores may be used to form highly interconnected passages within the casting, wherein the highly inter-connected cores provide mechanical integrity to the core. In an embodiment the casting core material is designed in the casting arrangement or system to crush, break or fracture (collectively referred to as fracture) under stress and/or strain applied to the core by the cooling of the casting. In an embodiment, the fractured cores are removed by various core removal processes, such as, but not limited to mechanical flushing using high pressure liquid, dissolution by chemical solvents, and the use of particle-laden liquid similar to sandblasting and extrusion honing.
(16) The frangible casting core is designed to fracture under the conditions of the casting process by designing the combination of cast metal and core under parameters including thermal expansion coefficient, elastic (Young's) modulus, casting core porosity, metal yield strength, and casting core flexural strength and fracture toughness.
(17) The core is formed of a material that can survive the temperatures of the casting process including ceramics, plastics, resins, solid salt or other minerals, and refractory metal alloys. In an embodiment, the ceramic may be, but is not limited to an oxide, carbide, nitride or boride In an embodiment, the core may be a ceramic oxide such as alumina (Al.sub.2O.sub.3), Silica (SiO.sub.2), magnesium oxide (MgO), or Chromite (Cr.sub.2O.sub.3). Cores may be fabricated using a variety of ceramic manufacturing techniques including additive manufacturing, replication casting, gel casting, powder processing methods, and machining from porous ceramic foams.
(18) The thermal expansion coefficient of the material used to form the core is selected to ensure isostatic pressure sufficient to fracture the casting cores into debris results from the casting process and materials. In an embodiment, the thermal expansion coefficient of core material may be between 25% and 75% of the thermal expansion coefficient of the metal alloy. In an embodiment, the thermal expansion coefficient of core material may be between 7?10.sup.?6 and 9?10.sup.?6 m/m-? C.
(19) The porosity of the core is designed to ensure brittle fracture occurs during the isostatic loading of the cooling process to break the core into debris loosely filling the passageway and small enough to be easily flushed from the passageway. Research has shown that very dense structures exhibit elastic behavior and will fracture while still filling the passage. Highly porous structures exhibit cellular behavior with localized crushing of ligaments deforming the structure without breaking it apart. Porosity also influences the fracture strength of the core, with porosities of 50% resulting in a fracture strength only 10% that of the solid material. In an embodiment, the porosity of the core is between 20% and 60%. In an embodiment, the porosity of the core is between 30% and 50%.
(20) The metal around the core must be sufficiently thick to remain below the elastic limit during the cooling process while developing isostatic pressures high enough to fracture the casting cores. If the surrounding metal is too thin it will deform elastically, plastically, or create hot tears in the metal at the surface of the core. In an embodiment, the metal thickness around the core is equal to or greater than the characteristic width (or diameter) of the casting core.
(21) The casting core segment aspect ratio is the ratio of the length of a casting core segment between any two connection points in a casting core network and the characteristic width (or diameter) of the casting core. Larger aspect ratios allow for more complex internal geometry with longer, thinner passageways, but these spans must also survive the dynamic forces of liquid metal infiltration into the mold. In an embodiment, the casting core segment aspect ratio is less than 10:1. In an embodiment, the casting core segment aspect ratio is less than 4:1.
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(23) The casting cores are design and fabricated with internal porosity while retaining little or no porosity on the surface. As shown in
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(33) In summary, in the embodiment described above, a casting is fabricated by processes including the following steps: 1. Porous ceramic casting cores are formed 2. Molten metal fills around the casting cores 3. Difference in expansion coefficients crushes cores 4. Fractured core is removed to create a casting having a cleared channel.
(34) The casting cores disclosed are distinct from conventional casting cores in that they are designed with porosities in a specific range to meet competing needs during the casting process. Initially, the casting core network must be strong enough to be self-supporting within the mold or supported by pins that remain in the cast part with loading due to the weight of the casting core network and possibly due to the added effective weight during centrifugal casting. The casting core network must also be strong enough to survive the melt infiltration (metal casting) process including low dynamic forces of liquid metal flow. This requires that the casting cores retain sufficient flexural strength to maintain a truss network with a maximum segment aspect ratio and therefore each casting core segment cannot be too porous. However, the casting cores must also experience brittle fracture into debris loosely filling the resulting passage during the cooling process after the melt solidifies under isostatic pressure loading resulting from the larger thermal expansion coefficient of the solid metal as compared with the casting core material. Each casting core segment must therefore be porous enough to weaken the segment geometry under isostatic pressure loading, provide enough dead space such that fractured materially loosely fills the passageway, and to ensure brittle fracture through the casting core segment rather than cellular or elastic behavior.
(35) The invention being thus described, it will be obvious that the same may be varied in many ways. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto. The entire disclosures of all references, applications, patents and publications cited above are hereby incorporated by reference.
(36) In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the disclosure without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosure not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this disclosure, but that the disclosure will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.