Method and Apparatus For Producing A Forged Compressor Wheel
20180221937 ยท 2018-08-09
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21K3/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B21J1/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B21J9/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An improved forging process includes the steps of pre-heating the top and bottom dies of a forging press to a specified temperature, and maintaining both dies at the specified temperature during subsequent forging operation with closed-loop temperature control systems. The top and bottom forging dies are each coupled to a dedicated thermic fluid heater, the temperature of each die is individually measured and compared to a respective target temperature, and the respective thermic fluid heaters are controlled in relation to detected deviations of the measured temperatures from the target temperatures. Compressor wheel preforms produced according to this process consistently exhibit primarily radial grain orientations that exactly match the expected values.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing forged aluminum compressor wheel preforms that consistently exhibit primarily radial grain orientation characteristics that conform to a desired value, the method comprising the steps of: pre-heating an aluminum ingot for forging by the top and bottom dies of a forging press, and concurrently pre-heating the top and bottom dies of the forging press; transferring the pre-heated ingot to the bottom die of the forging press; activating the forging press to forge a compressor wheel preform from the ingot, and closed-loop controlling the temperatures of the top and bottom dies to respective target temperatures during such forging; and deactivating the forging press upon completion of the forging and removing the compressor wheel preform from the forging press.
2. The method of claim 1, where the step of closed-loop controlling the temperatures of the top and bottom dies comprises the steps of: continuously measuring the temperatures of the top and bottom dies during the activation of said forging press; adjusting the temperature of the top die according to a difference between the measured temperature of the top die and a target temperature for the top die during the activation of said forging press; and adjusting the temperature of the bottom die according to a difference between the measured temperature of the bottom die and a target temperature for the bottom die during the activation of said forging press.
3. A forging apparatus for producing a forged aluminum compressor wheel preform that consistently exhibits primarily radial grain orientation characteristics that conform to a desired value, comprising: a forging press having top and bottom dies for forging said compressor wheel preform from a pre-heated aluminum ingot, each of the top and bottom dies having peripheral cavities; a first thermic fluid heater coupled to said top die and circulating fluid through the peripheral cavity of said top die; a second thermic fluid heater coupled to said bottom die and circulating fluid through the peripheral cavity of said bottom die; and a controller responsive to measured temperatures of said top and bottom dies and coupled to said first and second thermic fluid heaters to preheat said top and bottom dies prior to the forging of said compressor wheel preform, and then closed-loop control the temperatures of the top and bottom dies to respective target temperatures during the forging of said compressor wheel preform.
4. The forging apparatus of claim 3, further comprising: a chiller controlled by said controller to reduce the temperature of fluid supplied to said top or bottom dies when the measured temperatures of said top and bottom dies fall below the respective target temperatures. a forging press having top and bottom dies for forging said compressor wheel preform from a pre-heated aluminum ingot, each of the top and bottom dies having peripheral cavities; a first thermic fluid heater coupled to said top die and circulating fluid through the peripheral cavity of said top die; a second thermic fluid heater coupled to said bottom die and circulating fluid through the peripheral cavity of said bottom die; and a controller responsive to measured temperatures of said top and bottom dies and coupled to said first and second thermic fluid heaters to preheat said top and bottom dies prior to the forging of said compressor wheel preform, and then closed-loop control the temperatures of the top and bottom dies to respective target temperatures during the forging of said compressor wheel preform.
4. The forging apparatus of claim 3, further comprising: a chiller controlled by said controller to reduce the temperature of fluid supplied to said top or bottom dies when the measured temperatures of said top and bottom dies fall below the respective target temperatures.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0016] Referring to
[0017] Quality control analyses of forged aluminum wheel preforms manufactured as outlined in the flow diagram of
[0018] Further testing and analysis revealed that the part-to-part grain orientation variability observed in conventionally produced forged preforms is due almost entirely to temperature variation in the forging dies during forging. This is illustrated in the grain orientation diagram of
[0019] This testing and analysis led us to the discovery that the part-to-part variability and deviations from the expected grain orientation in aluminum compressor wheel preforms could be virtually eliminated by maintaining the temperature of the forging dies constant during forging. We accomplished this by coupling a pair of thermic fluid heaters directly to the top and bottom dies of the forging press. The die temperatures were monitored during the forging process, and the set/desired temperatures were maintained during forging though a closed-loop control of the thermic fluid heaters to eliminate detected deviations of the monitored temperatures from the set/desired temperatures. This process is outlined by the flow diagram blocks 30-37 of
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[0021] Of particular note to the present invention are the two thermic fluid heaters 58 and 60, and the chiller 62. There are two continuous fluid paths: a first path through the first thermic fluid heater 58, the bottom die of the forging press 48, and the chiller 62; and a second path through the second thermic fluid heater 60, the top die of the forging press 48, and the chiller 62. These fluid paths are signified by the arrows 63a, 63b and 63c, 63d and 63e. The thermic fluid heaters 58 and 60 add heat to the fluid supplied to the forging press dies, while the chiller 62 is capable of cooling the fluid if the respective die temperatures rise above the target temperatures. The block 64 designates a computer-based controller for carrying out the closed-loop control of the die temperatures; controller 64 is responsive to input signals representing the continuously measured die temperatures, and produces output control signals for the thermic fluid heaters 58 and 60, and the chiller 62 if needed, for eliminating detected deviations of the measured temperatures from the target temperatures.
[0022] The diagram of
[0023] The photograph of
[0024] The fatigue lifetime benefit of forged aluminum compressor wheel preforms produced according to this invention has been assessed using disk specimens in diaphragm bending tests. The disk specimens are cut from the back of the forged wheel preforms so that all variation in material structure can be evaluated. The results of the bending tests, depicted in the graph of
[0025] The superior fatigue life of forgings produced according to this invention was similarly confirmed by compressor wheel cyclic spin testing, the results of which are depicted by the bar chart of
[0026] In view of the foregoing, it will be understood that the forging process of the present invention is practical and easily implemented in the manufacturing environment, and that it affords a significant improvements in average fatigue life of forged compressor wheels with greatly reduced part-to-part variability. It will also be understood that while the process has been described in reference to the illustrated embodiments and diagrams, numerous modifications and variations in addition to those mentioned herein will occur to those skilled in the art, and still fall within the intended scope of the invention.