ALUMINUM ALLOY CASTING AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURE
20170327929 · 2017-11-16
Inventors
Cpc classification
B22D17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22D18/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22D21/007
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B22D17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22F1/043
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22D18/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
An Aluminum-Silicon casting alloy for use in high temperature service conditions. The alloy composition includes, by weight percentage, from about 5.00% to about 17.00% Silicon (Si), from about 0.00% to about 0.90% Iron (Fe), from about 0.00% to about 1.00% Manganese (Mn); from about 0.000% to about 0.018% Strontium (Sr), from about 0.00% to about 2.00% Copper (Cu), from about 0.00% to about 0.50% Magnesium (Mg), from about 0.00% to about 0.05% Zinc (Zn), from about 0.01% to about 0.10% Boron (B); and a balance of Aluminum (Al).
Claims
1. An Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process, the casting alloy having a composition including, by weight percentage: from about 5.00% to about 17.00% Silicon (Si); from about 0.00% to about 0.90% Iron (Fe); from about 0.00% to about 1.00% Manganese (Mn); from about 0.000% to about 0.018% Strontium (Sr); from about 0.00% to about 2.00% Copper (Cu); from about 0.00% to about 0.50% Magnesium (Mg); from about 0.00% to about 0.05% Zinc (Zn); from about 0.01% to about 0.10% Boron (B); and a balance of Aluminum (Al).
2. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 1 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, from about 7.85% to about 7.90% Silicon and from about 0.20% to about 0.30% Iron.
3. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 2 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, about 0.00% Strontium.
4. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 2 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, about 0.009% Strontium.
5. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 1 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, from about 0.30% to about 0.41% Iron and about 0.00% Strontium.
6. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 1 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, more than about 0.25% Magnesium.
7. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 1 wherein the composition includes, by weight percentage, more than about 1.50% Copper.
8. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 1 wherein the manufacturing process includes producing a casting by means of one of a sand casting process, a permanent mold casting process, a semi-permanent mold casting process, a high-pressure die casting process, a squeeze casting process, and lost foam casting process.
9. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 8 wherein the casting is analyzed to determine an as-cast silicon particle volume fraction, an average silicon particle size, an insoluble intermetallic particle volume fraction, and an insoluble intermetallic average particle size.
10. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 9 wherein the casting is solution treated to above an incipient melting temperature in the following steps: heating the casting to a first temperature for a first period of time; heating the casting to a second temperature for a second period of time; and heating the casting to a third temperature for a third period do time.
11. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 10 wherein the casting is aged at a temperature between about 150° C. and 190° C. and a time of about 6 to 10 hours.
12. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 10 wherein the first temperature is about 495° C. and the first period of time is three hours, the second temperature is about 515° C. and the second period of time is three hours, and the third temperature is about 530° C. and the third period of time is two hours.
13. An Aluminum alloy casting, the aluminum alloy having a chemical composition including, by weight percentage: from about 7.70% to about 7.90% Silicon (Si); from about 0.20% to about 0.41% Iron (Fe); from about 3.70% to about 4.10% Copper (Cu); from about 0.42% to about 0.46% Manganese (Mn); from about 0.28% to about 0.31% Magnesium (Mg); from about 0.06% to about 0.10% Zinc (Zn); from about 0.00% to about 0.001% Boron (B); from about 0.00% to about 0.01% Strontium (Sr); and a balance of Aluminum (Al).
14. The Aluminum alloy casting of claim 13 wherein the casting includes a eutectic silicon phase between about 6% to about 15% by volume.
15. The Aluminum alloy casting of claim 14 wherein the casting includes a eutectic silicon phase between about 6% to about 12% by volume.
16. The Aluminum alloy casting of claim 13 wherein the casting includes an insoluble intermetallic phase having Iron, Manganese, Chromium, and Nickle, the insoluble intermetallic phase is refined and spheroidized, and the insoluble intermetallic phase is included between about 4% and 10% by volume.
17. The Aluminum alloy casting of claim 13 wherein the casting includes an insoluble intermetallic phase having Iron, Manganese, Chromium, and Nickle, the insoluble intermetallic phase is refined and spheroidized, and the insoluble intermetallic phase is included between about 6% to about 10% by volume.
18. The Aluminum alloy casting of claim 13 wherein the casting is processed through a solution temperature heat treatment method, the method including the following steps: a first step of heating the casting to about 495° C. for three hours; a second step of heating the casting to about 515° C. for three hours; a third step of heating the casting to about 530° C. for two hours; and a fourth step of aging the casting at temperature between about 150° C. and 190° C. and a time of about 6 to 10 hours.
19. An Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process, the casting alloy having a composition including, by weight percentage: from about 5.00% to about 17.00% Silicon (Si); from about 0.00% to about 0.90% Iron (Fe); from about 0.00% to about 1.00% Manganese (Mn); from about 0.000% to about 0.018% Strontium (Sr); from about 0.00% to about 2.00% Copper (Cu); from about 0.00% to about 0.50% Magnesium (Mg); from about 0.00% to about 0.05% Zinc (Zn); from about 0.01% to about 0.10% Boron (B); and a balance of Aluminum (Al), and wherein the manufacturing process includes casting a part using the composition and solution treating the part in the following steps: heating the part to a first temperature for a first period of time; heating the part to a second temperature for a second period of time; heating the part to a third temperature for a third period do time, and aging the part at a temperature between about 150° C. and 190° C. and a time of about 6 to 10 hours.
20. The Aluminum-Silicon based casting alloy and manufacturing process of claim 19 wherein the first temperature is about 495° C. and the first period of time is three hours, the second temperature is about 515° C. and the second period of time is three hours, and the third temperature is about 530° C. and the third period of time is two hours.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0019] The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
DESCRIPTION
[0028] The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses.
[0029] As with most metal casting practices and applications, the metal alloy's microstructure has a great effect on the mechanical properties of the material. Specifically addressing Al—Si alloys, the primary casting practices that affect microstructure are solidification rate, chemical impurity modification, and thermal modification during heat treatment. For nearly all compositions, the minimum attained elevated temperature strength, specifically after long term elevated temperature exposure, is higher for parts cast in Al—Si alloys that have not undergone a solution heat treatment. Additionally, higher volume fractions of eutectic Si is another way to retain higher elevated temperature strength. However, both absence of a solution heat treatment and high eutectic Si contribute to lower heat treated and room temperature strength.
[0030] Referring now to
[0031] With reference to
[0032] Next,
[0033] As can be concluded from the above results, solution treatment of unmodified and Strontium modified 319 Al tends towards a similar microstructure of coarse, rounded eutectic Silicon. However, 48 hours is too long for commercial production of castings. A path to the microstructure achieved at 48 hours of solution treatment must be created.
[0034] In the continued search for stable aluminum castings in high temperature service environment, the effects of both composition modification and solution temperature on microstructure is examined. Table 1 below provides the compositions of a 319 Al with Manganese (Mn), 319 Al with Mn modified with Strontium (Sr), and 319 Al with Mn modified with higher levels of Iron (Fe).
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Sample composition for 319 Al with modifications. 319 Al + Mn, 319 Al + Mn + Sr, and 319 Al + Mn + Fe. Si Fe Cu Mn Mg Zn B Ti Sr SG 319 + Mn 7.890 0.228 3.910 0.426 0.304 0.095 0.001 0.130 0.000 2.720 319 + Mn + Sr 7.730 0.214 4.050 0.421 0.292 0.065 0.000 0.144 0.009 2.710 319 + Mn + Fe 7.860 0.405 3.770 0.459 0.283 0.100 0.001 0.124 0.000 2.700
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Sample solution heat treatment steps and temperatures. Heat Treat 495° C. 515° C. 530° C. 540° C. 555° C. Age As Cast none none none none none none T6 8:00 hr 180° C. 8:00 hr T61 3:00 hr 5:00 hr 180° C. 8:00 hr T62 3:00 hr 3:00 hr 2:00 hr 180° C. 8:00 hr T63 3:00 hr 2:00 hr 2:00 hr 1:00 hr 180° C. 8:00 hr T64 3:00 hr 2:00 hr 1:00 hr 1:00 hr 1:00 hr 180° C. 8:00 hr
[0035] With reference to
[0036] Tensile strengths from the samples of
[0037] Tensile strength of samples from Tables 1 and 2 that were subsequently stabilized for 200 hours at 250° C. are charted in
[0038] The larger quantity of hard particles in the microstructure, the aggregate hardness and strength increases; especially at elevated temperature where the hardness and strength of the aluminum matrix drop rapidly. Soluble phases such as soluble intermetallics and strengthening precipitates add very little to the hardness and strength after long-term elevated temperature exposure. However, soluble intermetallics and strengthening precipitates are very helpful during fabrication. For example, machining forces and tool wear are generally lower for higher hardness aluminum castings. Thus, retaining a minimum degree of hardening is necessary to aid in manufacturing the machined casting. Regarding long-term durability in an elevated temperature or cycling temperature environment, an optimum volume fraction of hard particles is required that balance hardness and strength against ductility and fatigue resistance. The optimum volume fraction is not fixed for every casting design application in that loading, design geometry, in-service temperature, and heating rates all contribute to determining the optimum volume fraction. In addition, the type of hard particle, including the hardness, size, shape, spacing and interfacial bonding to the matrix also contribute to the information required to specify the optimum volume fraction of hard particles.
[0039] As a result, a minimum level of precipitation hardening is required. In aluminum-silicon casting alloys adequate hardness can be developed with magnesium above 0.25% or copper above 1.5% or some combination of the two. Keeping Mg and Cu as low as practical is important since higher levels lead to the formation of soluble intermetallics that will reduce casting quality and impair the heat treatment process proposed below via the threat of incipient melting.
[0040] Additionally, the volume fraction, size, and distribution of insoluble hard phases, both eutectic silicon and intermetallic, must be controlled to a close tolerance. This is accomplished by chemistry modification to suit the local solidification conditions during the primary casting process. The volume fraction of these phases are not changed by subsequent thermal processing; only the shape and size and so it is favorable to produce the right amount in the initial microstructure. For high temperature applications, the alloy includes Silicon in the amount between 5.0% and 17.0% by weight, Iron in the amount between 0.0% and 0.9% by weight, Manganese in the amount between 0.0% and 1.0% by weight, Chromium in the amount between 0.0% and 0.3% by weight, and Nickle in the amount between 0.0% and 2.0% by weight.
[0041] Next, optimization of the heat treatment process produces the size, shape and volume fraction of insoluble hard particles specified to the application. Commercial alloys can show improved elevated-temperature strength when they have not been solution treated due to a significant fraction of the hard phases being soluble and thus disappear during solutionizing. In addition, current solution treatment processes have been optimized to minimize the eutectic silicon size in order to maximize ductility. However, for elevated temperature strength, slightly larger particle sizes are required. Thus under-solution treating an alloy with a fairly good morphological control of the insoluble intermetallics at an optimum volume fraction is one possible process to use. Alternatively, a super-critical solution treatment by stepping the temperature to levels that allow the eutectic silicon to grow past the minimum while simultaneously refining and speriodizing the insoluble intermetallic phases is another possible process. Once the shape and size of the hard particles is defined by the solution treatment process, subsequent thermal exposure during aging and in service will have little effect on the properties. Therefore, maintaining a stable structure and properties that will define the minimum hardness and strength attained is the target of the process once the hardening precipitates have become incoherent.
[0042] Alloy composition, casting process and heat treatment method are controlled to form an aluminum casting with insoluble intermetallic phases that are refined and spheroidized. Whereas the intermetallic phases are primarily iron-based, they can contain Mn, Cr, Ni, etc. as minor impurities. The intermetallic phases are included at less than 2 to 3 volume percent for applications requiring room-temperature toughness, or 6 to 10 volume percent for high stiffness applications. The eutectic silicon phase is stabilized beyond the minimum particle size and spheroidized via fragmentation of unmodified structures or agglomeration of modified structures. Particle size of hard particles is ideally between 50 and 110 microns (equivalent circle diameter (μm)=√{square root over (4A/π)}, with A as the measured area of the particle) with particle shape approaching spheroidal. The eutectic silicon phase is included as about 6 to 12 volume percent for high toughness applications and from 6 to 15 volume percent for higher stiffness applications.
[0043] Thus, Table 3 details alloy compositions for different applications; including moderate or high temperature and high or low toughness.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Chemistry compositions for moderate or high temperature, low or high toughness applications. Chemistry Modifications Based on Application - % Weight Application Moderate Moderate High High Temp/ Temperature/ Temperature/ Temperature/ Effect on High Lower High Lower Microstructure Element Toughness toughness Toughness Toughness Primary Hard Si 1-9 1-11 5-14 5-17 Particle Fe 0-0.5 0-0.8 0-0.6 0-0.9 Formers Mn 0-0.6 0-0.8 0-0.0.7 0-1.0 Cr 0-0.01 0-0.02 0-0.1 0-0.3 Ni 0-0.2 0-0.3 0-0.7 0-2.0 Solid Solution Zn 0-1 0-1 0-0.5 0-0.5 Lower temperature Cu 0-2.0 0-3.5 0-1.25 0-2.0 precipitates Mg 0-0.4 0-0.5 0-0.4 0-0.5 Precipitate Ti 0.1-0.2 0.1-0.25 0.1-0.3 0.1-0.45 Stabilizers, Grain V 0-0.1 0-0.2 0-0.3 0-0.45 Refiners Zr 0-0.25 0-0.3 0-0.4 0-0.5 B 0.01-0.02 0.01-0.03 0.01-0.05 0.01-0.1 Primary Hard La 0-1.0 0-2.0 0-1.0 0-2.0 Particle Sr 0-0.012 0-0.018 0-0.012 0-0.018 Morphology Modifiers Modifies Lower Sn 0-0.1 0-0.15 0-0.1 0-0.15 Temp precipitation process ‘tramp’ elements others 0-0.05 0-0.04 0-0.05 0-0.04
[0044] In addition to the composition guidelines of Table 3, Table 4 includes guidelines for optimal microstructure features for each of the applications.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Ideal microstructure features for moderate or high temperature, low or high toughness applications. Optimal Microstructure Features Silicon Particle Size μm 30-60 30-70 50-80 50-110 Silicon Volume Percent % 5-6 5-8 6-12 6-15 Insoluble Intermetallic μm 30-55 30-80 50-65 55-75 Particle Size Insoluble Intermetallic % 2-3 2.5-4.5 4-7 6-10 Volume Percent
[0045] While the best modes for carrying out the invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and examples for practicing the invention within the scope of the appended claims.