Method for the hot-dip coating of metal strip, in particular steel strip
09670573 ยท 2017-06-06
Assignee
Inventors
- Jegor BERGEN (Rheinberg, DE)
- Frank Spelleken (Dinslaken, DE)
- Michael Peters (Kleve, DE)
- Manuela Ruthenberg (Dortmund, DE)
- Friedhelm Macherey (Alpen, DE)
- Florian Spelz (Oberhausen, DE)
Cpc classification
C23C28/028
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23F17/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C21D9/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C21D9/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23F17/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C28/02
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method for the hot-dip coating of metal strip, in particular steel strip, in a metallic melting bath (3) is disclosed. In the method, the metal strip (1) to be coated is heated in a continuous furnace (2) and is introduced into the melting bath (3) through a snout (6) which is connected to the continuous furnace and which is immersed into the melting bath. To be able to satisfy the requirements placed on the coated strip (1) with regard to good deformability of the strip, as far as possible without cracking and peeling, and with regard to high anti-corrosion protection in a more effective and reliable manner, the disclosure proposes that, in the region delimited by the snout (6), a melt is used which is intentionally implemented differently, in terms of its chemical composition, than the chemical composition of the melt used in the melting bath (3).
Claims
1. A method for hot-dip coating of metal strip, comprising heating the metal strip to be coated in a continuous furnace and introducing the heated metal strip into a melting bath through a snout which is connected to the continuous furnace and which is immersed into the melting bath, wherein, in a region delimited by the snout, a melt is used which is intentionally implemented differently, in terms of chemical composition, than the chemical composition of the melt used in the melting bath.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein a concentration of at least one chemical constituent of the melt used in the snout is monitored, and the chemical composition of the melt used in the snout is adapted to a target value of the chemical composition in a manner dependent on a result of the monitoring.
3. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the snout comprises an elongated snout which ends at a distance in a range from 100 mm to 400 mm from a shell surface of a diverting roller which is arranged in the melting bath and which causes the heated metal strip entering the melting bath from the snout to be diverted into a substantially vertical direction.
4. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an immersed section of the snout is equipped with a narrowing portion, and/or whose inner width or inner height tapers at least over a length segment, in a direction of an outlet opening.
5. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an immersed section of the snout is equipped with a separating device or seal which prevents mixing of the melt situated in the snout and of the melt situated in the melting bath.
6. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an aluminum alloy comprising silicon is used as the melt in the region delimited by the snout, whereas a melt composed of pure aluminum is used in the melting bath.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an aluminum-zinc alloy comprising silicon is used as the melt in the region delimited by the snout, whereas an aluminum-zinc alloy with a relatively reduced silicon content, or without silicon, is used as a melt in the melting bath.
8. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein a zinc-magnesium alloy is used as the melt in the melting bath, whereas a zinc-magnesium alloy with a relatively reduced zinc, aluminum and/or magnesium content is used as the melt in the region delimited by the snout.
9. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the distance is in the range of 100 to 300 mm.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be discussed in more detail below on the basis of a drawing, which illustrates several exemplary embodiments. In the drawing, in each case schematically:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(11) In the exemplary embodiments, illustrated in
(12) For this purpose, the snout 6 is preferably equipped with a shaft-shaped snout elongation piece 6.1 for increasing the snout immersion depth. The snout elongation piece 6.1 has an attachment section 6.11 into which the lower end of the snout 6 projects. The attachment section 6.11 has a basin- or trough-shaped receiving chamber 6.12, the encircling side wall of which is fastened to a support 6.13 mounted on the upper edge of the melting bath vessel 4. In the base of the attachment section 6.11 or receiving chamber 6.12, there is formed an elongate opening 6.14 through which the metal strip 1 to be coated runs into the shaft-shaped snout elongation piece 6.1.
(13) The snout 6 or the snout elongation piece 6.1 is preferably designed such that its clear inner width or clear inner height tapers toward the outlet opening 6.15 at least over a length segment. The tapering of the inner width or inner height arises from the fact that the walls 6.16, 6.17, facing toward the top side and bottom side of the strip 1, of the snout 6 or snout elongation piece 6.1 converge in the direction of the outlet opening 6.15. The inner width or inner height of the snout or snout elongation piece 6.1 is preferably characterized, in these exemplary embodiments, by a continuous tapering.
(14) The outlet opening 6.15, or narrowest point of the snout elongation piece 6.1, preferably has a clear inner width of at most 120 mm, particularly preferably at most 100 mm. Furthermore, the snout elongation piece 6.1 is dimensioned so as to end at a distance A in the range from 100 mm to 400 mm, preferably 100 mm to 300 mm, from the shell surface of the diverting roller 7. The distance A between the lower end of the snout elongation piece 6.1 and the shell surface of the diverting roller 7 amounts to for example approximately 200 mm.
(15) As is known per se, the diverting roller 7 is assigned a stabilizing roller 8 in order to ensure that the strip 1 passes in flat form, and in vibration-free fashion, through the flat jets 5, of the jet stripping device, arranged above the melt bath. The support arms of the diverting roller 7 and of the stabilizing roller 8 are denoted in
(16) In the exemplary embodiments of the device according to the invention illustrated in
(17) The elongation, according to the invention, of the snout 6 serves to realize the most extensive possible decoupling of the melt that is implemented or used in the snout 6 from the melt that is implemented/used in the rest of the melting bath vessel 4, which differs in terms of its chemical composition from the melt that is implemented/used in the snout 6. This gives rise, in the melting bath 3, to regions with different melt compositions, in order to implement particular desired alloy coating characteristics. This will be discussed in more detail below with reference to
(18) In the case of conventional hot-dip coating of steel strip with an aluminum melt which comprises approximately 10 wt % silicon, a relatively thin alloy layer 11 is formed at the interface between steel and coating metal (
(19)
(20) The device according to the invention illustrated in
(21) Instead of a pure aluminum melt, it is also possible for some other metallic melt to be used in the melting bath vessel 4. For example, an aluminum-zinc melt may be used in the melting bath vessel 4, whereas, in the region delimited by the snout 6, a melt is used which is likewise based on an aluminum-zinc melt but which additionally has, or has had, silicon added to it for the purpose of suppressing or reducing the alloy layer, whereby improved deformability is attained.
(22) A further example for the use, according to the invention, of melts with different chemical compositions is the use of a zinc-magnesium melt in the melting bath vessel 4, whereas a melt with reduced zinc, aluminum and/or magnesium content is used in the snout 6. In this way, it is possible to reduce instances of insufficient wetting in the coating of the strip 1, and thus to improve the surface quality of the hot-dip coated strip.
(23) In the case of prior art coating systems as per
(24) In
(25) The embodiment of the invention is not restricted to the exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawing. Rather, numerous variants are conceivable which make use of the invention specified in the appended claims even in the case of a different design. For example, it also falls within the scope of the invention for the inner width or inner height of the immersed snout elongation piece 6.1 to taper in the direction of its outlet opening 6.15 at least over a length segment in stepped form by way of one or more step changes in inner width or inner height, and/or by way of snout wall sections which are angled differently relative to one another. The snout elongation piece 6.1 may for example be assembled from multiple walls or wall sections which face toward the top side and bottom side of the strip 1. The (continuous) tapering of the inner width or inner height of the snout elongation 6.1 may thus also extend only over a length segment thereof.