COOLING FACILITY AND METHOD
20180236514 ยท 2018-08-23
Inventors
- Vincent DUHOUX (Coublevie, FR)
- Bruno MAGNIN (Saint-Aupre, FR)
- Daniel BELLOT (Izeaux, FR)
- Jos? ROCHE (Bowling Green, KY, US)
- Pierre Aucouturier (Sundhoffen, FR)
Cpc classification
B21B37/74
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21B45/0218
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22F1/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B21B37/74
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21B45/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22F1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C21D11/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A cooling method for a rolling ingot of aluminium alloy after metallurgical homogenization heat treatment of said ingot and before hot rolling, characterized in that cooling by 30 to 150? C. is performed at a rate of 150 to 500? C./h, with a thermal differential of less than 40? C. throughout the treated portion of the ingot is disclosed. A facility allowing use of said method and said implementation is also disclosed.
Claims
1. A method of cooling an aluminum alloy rolling ingot after a metallurgical homogenization heat treatment of said ingot at a homogenization temperature, optionally between 450 to 600? C., and prior to hot rolling, wherein the aluminum alloy rolling ingot has a format of dimensions from 250 to 800 mm in thickness, from 1000 to 2000 mm in width, and from 2000 to 8000 mm in length; a top surface, a bottom surface, and four side surfaces, wherein the top and bottom surfaces have a larger surface area than the side surfaces; and a head and a foot corresponding to extremities in a longitudinal direction, wherein cooling, by a cooling value of 30 to 150? C., is performed at a rate of from 150 to 500? C./h, with a thermal differential of less than 40? C. over the entire ingot cooled from the homogenization temperature thereof.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein cooling is carried out in at least two phases: a first spraying phase in which the ingot is cooled in a chamber equipped with a spray system comprising ramps of nozzles for spraying cooling liquid or spray under pressure, divided into upper and lower parts of said chamber, so as to spray the larger top and bottom surfaces of said ingot, and a complementary phase of thermal equalization in still air, in a tunnel with interior reflective walls, lasting from about 2 to about 30 minutes, depending on the fonnat of the ingot and the cooling value.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the spray system guides the cooling liquid or spray under pressure to the ingot edges where the cooling liquid or spray under pressure is discharged in form of a cascade without touching the ingot's side surfaces.
4. The method according to claim 2, wherein the spraying and thermal equalization phases are repeated and for an overall average cooling of more than 80? C.
5. The method according to claim 2, wherein the cooling liquid or spray under pressure is water.
6. The method according to claim 2, wherein the head and the foot of the ingot, corresponding to 300 to 600 mm at ends thereof, are cooled less than the rest of the ingot.
7. The method according to claim 2, wherein cooling of the head and foot is modulated by turning the ramps of nozzles on or off.
8. The method according to claim 2, wherein the spraying phases and not therma equalization are repeated, and in that the head and foot of the ingot are cooled differently from the rest of the ingot in at least one of the spray phases.
9. The method according to claim 8, wherein a first spray phase is performed with zero heel, or continuous spraying of the ingot followed, without a first thermal equalization phase, by a second spray phase with a heel of a pair of ramps, thereby allowing to reduce the duration of a final equalization phase necessary for thermal balancing of the ingot.
10. The method according to claim 2, wherein transverse thermal uniformity of the ingot is ensured by modulating spraying in the ingot width by switching the nozzles or spray nozzles on or off, or screening said spraying.
11. The method according to claim 1, wherein the nozzles produce full cone jets with an angle of between 45 and 60?, and lower nozzle axes are oriented normally to the bottom surface of the ingot.
12. A facility for cooling an aluminum alloy rolling ingot after a metallurgical homogenization heat treatment of said ingot at a homogenization temperature, comprising: a spray chamber comprising ramps of nozzles for spraying cooling liquid or spray under pressure, arranged in upper and lower parts of said chamber, so as to spray two large surfaces, top and bottom, of said ingot, wherein upper nozzle ramps are paired in the direction of movement of the ingot; in any given pair, the upper ramps are inclined such that: jets of the two paired nozzle ramps are oriented in opposition to one another; the jets have a normal edge to the upper surface of the ingot; an equalization tunnel in still air on leaving the spray chamber, in a tunnel whose internal walls and roof are made of an internally reflective material, allowing equalization of the ingot by heat diffusion in said ingot, the core warming the surfaces.
13. The facility according to claim 12, wherein: the cooling liquid or spray nozzles of the cell produce full cone jets with an angle of between 45 and 60?.
14. The facility according to claim 12, wherein: lower nozzle axes are oriented normally to the lower surface of the ingot.
15. The facility according to claim 12, wherein: an overlap of jets of the two paired ramps is between ? and ? of the width of each jet, and optionally substantially half.
16. The facility according to claim 12, wherein an envelope of the two paired nozzle ramps so formed has an M profile.
17. The facility according to claim 12, wherein: pairs of upper and lower nozzle ramps are placed substantially face-to-face, so that upper and lower spray lengths are substantially equal and opposite each other.
18. The facility according to claim 12, wherein the entire facility, spray chamber and equalization tunnel are controlled by a thermal model encoded on a PLC, the thermal model determining the settings of the facility according to the temperature estimated by thermal measurement at the start of the spray chamber and according to the target output temperature, optionally at a start temperature for hot rolling.
19. The facility according to claim 12, wherein: wherein the aluminum alloy rolling ingot has a format of dimensions from 250 to 800 mm in thickness, from 1000 to 2000 mm in width, and from 2000 to 8000 mm in length; a top surface, a bottom surface, and four side surfaces, wherein the top and bottom surfaces have a larger surface area than the side surfaces; and a head and a foot corresponding to extremities in a longitudinal direction, and wherein the spray system guides the cooling liquid or spray under pressure to the ingot edges where the cooling liquid or spray under pressure is discharged in form of a cascade without touching the ingot's side surfaces.
20. A method for treating an ingot in a facility according to claim 12, comprising: centering the ingot at an entrance to the facility; measuring upper surface temperature of the ingot; calculation by the PLC, using the thermal model, of the spray chamber settings depending on the input temperature and the target output temperature, optionally target cooling of the ingot, including determining the number of ramps activated, the number of nozzles activated at the ingot edges, speed of movement of the ingot within the spray chamber, starting and stopping the spraying ramps, and the holding time in the equalization tunnel; moving the ingot continuously through the spray chamber, with upper and lower spraying according to the PLC calculations; transfer of the ingot from the spray chamber to the equalization tunnel; and holding the ingot in the equalization tunnel for a period determined by the PLC.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0068] The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of the necessary fee.
[0069]
[0070]
Multi-pass cooling can also be performed with a single machine, by means of successive passages.
[0071]
[0072]
[0073]
[0074]
[0075]
[0076]
[0077]
[0078]
[0079]
[0080]
[0081]
The thermal profile in the longitudinal direction of the ingot is controlled by:
Absence of, or very low runoff in the longitudinal direction of the ingot, by mounting the upper ramps in opposition
Starting and stopping spraying of each pair of ramps at a specific position of the ingot: this is the concept of a spraying heel.
[0082]
[0083]
[0084]
It can be seen that the spray triggering strategy clearly makes it possible to control the longitudinal thermal profile of the ingot.
[0085]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF A PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0086] The invention essentially consists of a cooling process using a cooling liquid or spray for a slab or a rolling ingot made of aluminium alloy, of 30 to 150? C. in a few minutes, i.e. at an average cooling rate of between 150 and 500? C./hour.
[0087] It is principally made up of two phases:
[0088] A first phase in which the ingot is sprayed with a cooling liquid or spray, typically using continuous spraying
[0089] A second phase of thermal equalization of the ingot.
[0090] During the first spraying phase, the ingot is cooled in a chamber having nozzles spraying cooling liquid or spray under pressure, typically water and preferably deionized.
[0091] The nozzles or tuyers are divided up in the upper and lower parts of said chamber, so as to spray the two large upper and lower surface of the ingot.
[0092] The option of a continuous spraying process can limit the risk of hot spots related to contacts between the ingot and its support, which generally consists of cylindrical or conical rollers.
[0093] The average cooling of the ingot (?Tmoy ingot) is controlled by the spraying time for each section of the ingot.
[0094] During this phase, the ingot is thermally very heterogeneous in its thickness, because of the high Biot number.
[0095] The cooling homogeneity in the width of the ingot is controlled by: [0096] a) Controlling the spray width in the transverse direction of the ingot, by the number of active nozzles or the use of screens [0097] b) A spray method promoting lateral discharge of the water sprayed on the upper surface. The cooling liquid is guided to the ingot edges of the ingot and is discharged in the form of a cascade without touching the small surfaces of said ingot. Because of this, ingot cooling is very homogeneous. This method in fact consists of pairing two ramps of nozzles, arranged in opposition, as shown in
[0098] The cooling homogeneity in the length of the ingot is controlled by: [0099] c) Controlling the beginning and the end of spraying by triggering spraying ramps at the desired position on the ingot or, again, by the use of screens. In this way, it is possible for the head and the foot of the ingot not to be sprayed. An ingot is then obtained with a hot head and foot, which helps it to engage during reversible hot rolling [0100] d) Greatly reducing runoff in the longitudinal direction of the ingot. This very low runoff is achieved through characteristic b) above of the invention, favouring lateral discharge of the cooling liquid sprayed on top of the ingot.
[0101] The spray phase is therefore designed to reduce thermal heterogeneity in the three directions of the ingot. The invention particularly makes it possible to control the temperature profiles in the transverse direction and in the longitudinal direction of the ingot, which is very significant because possible thermal gradients along the two large dimensions would be difficult to reverse in a short time.
[0102] Then follows the phase of thermal equalization of the ingot:
[0103] After spraying, the ingot is kept for a few minutes in a configuration of low heat exchange with its environment. These thermal conditions allow thermal equalization of the ingot, in a few minutes for cooling by less than 30? C. and in about 30 minutes maximum for cooling by 150? C. This phase is essential to achieve the required thermal uniformity specifications. It enables a thermal differential of DTmax of less than 40? C. to be achieved on a large ingot.
[0104] The invention can also be adapted to high absolute cooling values. When the required mean cooling of the ingot is greater than typically 80? C., it is possible to cycle all the spray and equalization phases, reducing the average temperature of a very thick ingot at each spray-equalization cycle.
[0105] The method described ensures rapid and controlled cooling of a thick slab, in particular a rolling ingot, made of aluminium alloy. It is also robust and prevents the known risks of local excess cooling.
[0106] The cooling machine or facility, which itself comprises, firstly, at least one spray chamber, typically horizontal and spraying continuously, and, secondly, at least one thermal equalization tunnel.
[0107] The spray chamber allows phase 1 of the process described above to be implemented.
[0108] The steps involved in processing the ingot in this machine or facility are: [0109] 1) Centring the ingot, at the entrance to the machine [0110] 2) Measuring the upper surface temperature of the ingot [0111] 3) Calculation by the PLC, using the thermal model, of the spray chamber settings depending on the input temperature and the target output temperature, i.e. target cooling of the ingot, including determining the number of ramps of nozzles activated, the number of nozzles open at the ingot edges, speed of movement of the ingot within the spray chamber, starting and stopping the spraying ramps, the holding time in the equalization tunnel [0112] 4) Moving the ingot through the spray chamber, with upper and lower spraying according to the PLC calculations.
[0113] The spray chamber is provided with ramps of nozzles or tuyers for spraying cooling liquid or spray under pressure.
[0114] If the latter is water, it should ideally be deionized or at least very clean and with a very low mineral content, to prevent clogging the nozzles and to ensure stability of heat transfer between the water and the ingot. The spraying machine can advantageously, particularly for reasons of economy, operate in a closed cycle, for example with a catch basin under the spraying machine.
[0115] The cooling liquid or spray nozzles produce full cone sprays or jets with an angle of between 45 and 60? (in the example: 60? angle full cone nozzles of the Lechler brand). The nozzle axes of the lower ramps are oriented normally to the lower surface. The upper ramps are paired. In any given pair of upper ramps, the ramps are inclined such that: [0116] The jets of the two ramps are oriented in opposition to one another [0117] The jets have a normal edge to the upper surface of the ingot [0118] The overlap of two jets is between ? and ? of the width of the jet, and preferably substantially half [0119] The envelope of the two jets so formed has an M profile. [0120] The pairs of upper and lower nozzle ramps are placed substantially face-to-face, so that the upper and lower spray lengths are substantially equal and opposite each other.
[0121] In the case of continuous spraying, the ingot travel speed is greater than, or equal to 20 mm/s, or 1.2 m/min.
[0122] On leaving the spray chamber, the ingot is transferred, for example using automated carriages, into one or more equalization tunnel(s). The purpose of the tunnel is to minimize heat transfer between the ingot and air, which helps to achieve better thermal equalization of the ingot. This thermal equalization occurs by diffusion of heat in the ingot, the core warming the surfaces of the ingot.
[0123] The equalization tunnel consists of vertical walls and a roof made from a materially that is ideally reflective on the inner side of the tunnel.
[0124] It prevents air currents around the ingot, ensuring the absence of heat transfer by forced convection. It also reduces heat transfer by natural convection and limits radiative transfer if the walls are reflective.
[0125] Finally, the cooling machine or facility comprising the spray chamber and the equalization tunnel is controlled by a thermal model encoded in the PLC of the machine. The thermal model determines the settings of the machine depending on the temperature at the start of the spray chamber, or input temperature, and depending on the target output temperature, usually the rolling temperature.
Examples
Example 1: Uniform Cooling by 40? C. of an AA3104 Type Alloy Ingot
[0126]
[0127] The ingot leaves the homogenizing furnace at 600? C.
[0128] The ingot cooling method is the single-pass method described in
[0129] The ingot is transferred to the cooling machine in 180 s. This transfer time includes: [0130] moving the ingot between the furnace outlet and the inlet of the cooling machine [0131] lateral centring of the ingot [0132] measuring the upper surface temperature of the ingot [0133] The calculation time of the cooling machine settings by the PLC (spray chamber and tunnel).
[0134] Then the ingot moves through the spray chamber, each point of the ingot except the ends (head and foot) undergoing spraying for 46 seconds. The surface flow rate of the spray is 500 l/(min.Math.m.sup.2) on the two large surfaces of the ingot. The spray heel is set to a pair of ramps, as described in
[0135] The ingot surface temperature drops to about 320? C., while the core of the ingot remains almost isothermal during the spraying phase. Then, by heat diffusion between the core and the surface, the core gives up heat to the surface, and the ingot becomes thermally uniform.
[0136] The thermal differential in the ingot (dt max) is maximal at the end of the spray phase; its value is approximately 280? C. for this configuration. It drops quickly once spraying of the ingot stops: after a 6 minute wait (transfer and equalization in the tunnel), the thermal differential DTmax is reduced to less than 40? C.
Example 2: Uniform Cooling by 135? C. of an AA6016 Type Alloy Ingot
[0137]
[0138] The ingot cooling method is the two-pass method described in
[0139] The ingot is transferred to the cooling machine in 100 s. This transfer time includes: [0140] moving the ingot between the furnace outlet and the inlet of the cooling machine [0141] lateral centring of the ingot [0142] measuring the upper surface temperature of the ingot [0143] the calculation time of the cooling machine settings by the PLC. Then the ingot moves through the spray chamber, each point of the ingot except the ends (head and foot) undergoing spraying for 51 seconds. The surface flow rate of the spray is 800 l/(min.Math.m.sup.2) on the two large surfaces of the ingot. The spray heel is set to one ramp, as described in
[0144] The ingot surface temperature drops to about 60? C. The core of the ingot remains almost isothermal during the first spray phase and then cools during the second spray phase. Then, by heat diffusion between the core and the surface, the core gives up heat to the surface, and the ingot becomes thermally uniform.
[0145] The thermal differential in the ingot (th max) is maximal at the end of each of the spray phases, its value is approximately 470? C. for this configuration. It drops quickly once spraying of the ingot stops: the thermal differential DTmax of the ingot is 55? C. after a 13 minute wait in the tunnel and falls to below 40? C. after 23 minutes in the tunnel.
Example 3: Uniform Cooling by 125? C. of an AA6016 Type Alloy Ingot
[0146] The ingot is 600 mm thick, 1850 mm wide and 4100 mm long. The ingot leaves the homogenizing furnace at 530? C.
[0147] The ingot cooling method is the two-pass method described in
[0148] The ingot is transferred to the cooling machine in 100 s. This transfer time includes: [0149] moving the ingot between the furnace outlet and the inlet of the cooling machine [0150] lateral centring of the ingot [0151] measuring the upper surface temperature of the ingot [0152] the calculation time of the cooling machine settings by the PLC. Then the ingot moves through the spray chamber, each point of the ingot undergoing spraying for 51 seconds. The surface flow rate of the spray is 500 l/(min.Math.m.sup.2) on the two large surfaces of the ingot. The spray heel is zero, as described in
[0153] Example 3 shows that a judicious choice of spraying heels can significantly reduce equalization time after spraying. For a cooling method in several passes, the choice of heels may differ from one pass to another. For a cooling method in 2 passes, the heel chosen for the first pass gains from being contrary to the heel chosen for the second pass. In an optimized manner, and for a cooling method in 2 passes, a first pass with zero heel (continuous spraying of the ingot) followed by a second pass with a heel of a pair of ramps can significantly reduce the equalization time required for thermal balancing of the ingot.