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4.

Feeder Design and Analysis






The solidification of metals continues to be a phenomenon of great interest to physicists,
metallurgists, casting engineers and software developers. It directly affects the production
cycle time, internal quality of castings and material utilization (yield). We will briefly
review the solidification phenomenon in castings and focus on three major influencing
factors affecting: freezing range, cooling rate and thermal gradient. Finally, we will list
the different types of solidification shrinkage related defects and see why it is important
to achieve controlled progressive directional solidification.


4.1 Solidification Phenomenon

When molten metal enters a mould cavity, its heat is absorbed by and transferred through
the mould wall. In the case of pure metals and eutectics, the solidification proceeds layer-
by-layer (like onion shells) starting from the mould wall and proceeding inwards. The
moving isothermal interface between the liquid and solid region is called the
solidification front. As the front solidifies, it contracts in volume, and draws molten metal
from the adjacent (inner) liquid layer. When the solidification front reaches the innermost
region or the hot spot, there is no more liquid metal left and a void called shrinkage
cavity, is formed (Fig.5.1). This is avoided by attaching a feeder designed to solidify later
than the hot spot. The shrinkage cavity shifts to the feeder, which is cut off after casting
solidification and recycled. Understanding the solidification phenomenon will help us in
predicting the type and location of shrinkage defects, and in overcoming them
successfully by appropriate design of feeders.















Fig.4.1: Casting solidification in a mould


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The temperature history of a location inside the casting with respect to the neighbouring
locations governs the formation of shrinkage cavity as well as the macrostructure. This is
difficult to determine even for a simple shape, since all modes of heat transfer are
involved during casting solidification: by convection within the molten metal; by
conduction in the solidified portion of the casting; by convection and radiation at the
metal-mould interface; and by conduction in the mould material. Also, the release of
latent heat has to be addressed; it increases the casting temperature at that instant and
location, and has the effect of delaying the solidification.

The most important factor affecting the rate of heat transfer from the casting to the mould
is the interface heat transfer coefficient. It depends on the thickness of the oxide layer and
the air gap at the interface. Both are not constant, but gradually grow during casting
solidification. The air gap depends on the amount of gas generated (and retained) after
metal-mould reaction, the roughness of the mould surface and the expansion of the mould
and cores. The air gap is more at external surfaces at the top of the mould, and it grows
till the end of solidification.

Let us study three important factors that govern the solidification characteristics of
castings: freezing range (F), thermal gradients (G) and cooling rate (R). As we will see,
these factors are primarily influenced by the casting metal, process and geometry,
respectively.

Freezing range: Most casting alloys do not have a distinct melting point; they solidify
over a range of temperature. The difference between the liquidus (temperature above
which the alloy is completely liquid) and solidus (temperature below which alloy is
completely solid) is referred to as the freezing range, given by F = T
liq
T
sol
. In such
castings, there are three distinct zones during solidification: completely solid, completely
liquid and intermediate mushy zone. The mush zone is caused by the growth of tree-like
structures called dendrites, and the liquid metal being trapped in their branches.

The freezing range is one of major factors affecting casting macrostructure, mainly the
grain shape. Alloys with short freezing range behave like pure metals and eutectics, and
the solidification proceeds layer-by-layer. The macrostructure comprises columnar grains
growing along the direction of heat transfer (perpendicular to the mould wall) since they
are hindered sideways by adjacent grains. In long freezing range alloys, the solidification
is initiated at a large number of points, and the grains grow in size until the neighbouring
grains hinder them. Thus the macrostructure comprises equi-axed grains.

The effective freezing range is greatly influenced by the cooling rate and thermal
gradients inside the casting. A long freezing range alloy may behave like a short freezing
range alloy (columnar structure) in a metal mould.

Thermal gradient: The thermal gradient G
ij
between two points i and j inside the casting
at a given instant of time is given by
G
ij
= (T
j
-T
i
) / s


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where, T
j
-T
i
is the difference in temperature between the two points and s is the
distance between them. The gradients are greatly influenced by the casting geometry. In
general, the gradients are highest in a direction normal to the solidification front, but
gradually decrease as we move from the mould wall to the casting centre. Thus thin
castings and points near the mould wall are characterized by high gradients, whereas the
middle regions of thick castings have low gradients. A higher difference in section
thickness of neighbouring regions enhances the thermal gradient between them.

The feed metal primarily moves along the direction of thermal gradients to compensate
for volumetric contraction during solidification. Poor gradients, especially at an isolated
hot spot, cause shrinkage porosity.

Cooling rate: The average cooling rate R
ij
from an instant of time
i
to
j
at a given
location inside the casting is given by
R
ij
= (T
i
T
j
) / (
j
-
i
)

where, (T
i
T
j
) is the fall in temperature at the location over the time period. The cooling
rate mainly depends on the mould material and the air gap formed at the metal-mould
interface, which affect the rate at which heat is extracted from the metal. A metal mould
will produce higher cooling rates than a sand mould. The cooling rates are higher near the
metal-mould interface than the casting interior. The cooling rates are higher in the
beginning and decrease as the solidification progresses. Also, the cooling rates are higher
at mould bottom where the metal is in contact with the mould (almost zero air gap) than
at the top.

The cooling rate during the time of solidification affects the grain size. A higher cooling
rate promotes solidification and produces fine grains. This is observed near the mould
wall, where undercooling leads to almost instantaneous nucleation of crystals. It is also
seen in metal moulds, to a greater depth, compared to sand moulds. On the other hand,
the interior regions of a casting, where cooling rates are low, exhibit larger grains. The
grain size affects the strength and hardness of the casting.

Solidification-related defects (Fig.5.2) can be primarily classified based on size, as macro
shrinkage and micro shrinkage.

Macro shrinkage: This appears as a concentrated zone of shrinkage holes or even a
single shrinkage cavity with irregular shape and rough surface. It can be detected by non
destructive tests (like radiography, ultrasound and magnetic particle methods). It occurs
at isolated hot spots in short freezing range alloys. Typical locations are the middle of
thick sections, junctions, corners and regions between two or more cores. A special form
of macro shrinkage is the shrinkage pipe, which occurs in the upper portion of a feeder in
short freezing range alloys, taking the shape of an inverted cone.

Micro shrinkage: It appears like porosity or small holes of rough surface, and is usually
detected during machining. It invariably occurs in castings of long freezing range alloys
and occasionally in thick castings of short freezing range alloys. It may be barely visible

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to the naked eye, but affects the strength (and therefore the failure) of critical sections. In
long thick sections, it appears as a dotted line and called as centreline shrinkage.


































Fig.4.2: Solidification shrinkage related defects: top row macro porosity (left and
right); middle porosity (left) and sink (right); bottom corner shrinkage (left) and crack
(right). [Source: Atlas of Casting Defects, Institute of British Foundrymen, UK].

The most probable locations for shrinkage defects inside a casting are characterized by
high temperature, coupled with low gradient and high cooling rate.

High Temperature (could be a peak, a ridge or even a plateau) signifies fewer directions
from where liquid metal can flow in to compensate for solidification shrinkage.


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Low gradient implies that even if liquid metal is available at a neighbouring region,
there is insufficient thermal pressure for the flow to actually take place.

High cooling rate implies that even if liquid metal and sufficient gradients are available,
the time available is too short and the liquid metal freezes before reaching the hot spot.

In the centrelines of thick sections in short freezing range alloys (for example, steel), the
shrinkage porosity can be predicted using the Niyama criterion given by

G / R < 1

Where G is the thermal gradient in mm/s and R is the rate of solidification in K/s.

A casting (along with feeders) should be designed to achieve controlled progressive
directional solidification, so that it is free of solidification shrinkage defects.

Progressive solidification refers to solidification in a given cross-section of the casting:
ideally starting from the mould wall and gradually progressing towards the centre of the
cross section.

Directional solidification refers to sequence of solidification of different regions of the
casting: ideally starting from thin regions at one end, followed by adjacent thicker
regions, and finally ending at the thickest region (usually the feeder).


4.2 Solidification Time and Rate

The solidification time of a casting depends on casting geometry, material and process. In
this section, we will review the basic equations for estimating the casting solidification
time and rate. We will also look at relationships between temperature, gradient and
cooling rate that indicate the occurrence of solidification shrinkage defects.

The following major assumptions are made for deriving an equation for the solidification
time of a simple shaped casting:

1. The flow of heat is unidirectional, and the mould is semi-infinite (that is, neglect the
effect of finite thickness of mould).
2. The properties of the metal and mould material are uniform (throughout the bulk) and
remain constant over the range of temperature considered.
3. The metal is in complete contact with the mould surface (no air gap is formed)
4. The metal-mould interface temperature remains constant from the start to end of
solidification.

The solidification time
s
can be determined by equating the heat given up by the casting
Q
cast
to the heat transferred through the mould Q
mould
.


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Q
cast
=
cast
V [ L + C
cast
( T
pour
T
sol
) ]

Q
mould
=
0
(Q/) d = 1.128 (K
mould

mould
C
mould
) A (T
int
T
amb
)
s


Equating both, we obtain the famous Chvorinovs equation, as follows.

s
= [
cast
(L + C
cast
(T
pour
T
sol
)) / 1.128 (K
mould

mould
C
mould
) (T
int
T
amb
) ] ( V / A )

s
= k ( V / A )
2


where, V is the casting volume (representing the heat content) and A is the cooling
surface area (through which heat is extracted). The ratio V/A is referred to as the casting
modulus. Thus, if two different shapes (say, a cube and a plate) have the same volume,
the one with the larger cooling surface area (the plate) will solidify first.

The Chvorinovs equation is very useful for comparing the relative solidification time of
two or more simple shaped castings (same metal and mould material), but with different
volume and cooling surface area. This principle can even be applied to determine the
order of solidification of different regions of a casting, by dividing it into simple shapes
and determining the volume and cooling surface area of each region. The region with the
highest modulus is considered to solidify last and identified as a hot spot.

Feeders are designed so that their modulus is more than the modulus of the hot spot
region. This is a simple yet effective criterion to ensure that the feeder remains liquid
long enough to supply the feed metal to compensate the volumetric shrinkage of the
casting.

Rate of solidification: This can be estimated for skin freezing alloys in the following
manner. Let d be the thickness of casting solidified near a mould wall of area A after time
from the start of solidification. Thus we have,

= k ( V / A )
2
= k d
2


d = k
1


The above relation has been experimentally verified by pouring-out a set of castings
each after a different length of time, by researchers such as Briggs as early as 1935. The
relation between solidification time and casting modulus has been verified by a large
number of researchers including Chvorinov, Wlodawer, Ruddle and Pellini between
1940-60. The most widely used method involved placing thermocouples in a mould and
obtaining the cooling curves from each.

The equations for solidification time and rate have limited application in practice, due to
the geometric complexity of the casting, significant variation in metal and mould
properties from pouring to solidus temperature and the effect of varying resistance at the
metal-mould interface (due to air gap and oxide layer). Various researchers have

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attempted to derive improved equations with limited success. They are further hindered
by the unavailability of accurate thermo-physical data for different casting and mould
materials, which need to be determined from experiments.

While Chvorinovs equation is useful to identify the most probable regions of shrinkage
porosity, we require the temperature history T=T(x,y,z,) of those regions, especially
towards the end of solidification. Based on this, we can determine the temperature peaks,
gradients and cooling rates, and thereby predict the location and occurrence of shrinkage
cavity.

4.3 Feeder Location and Shape

Feeders are designed to compensate the solidification shrinkage of a casting, so that it is
free of shrinkage porosity. Feeder design parameters include the number, location, shape
and dimensions of feeders. We will first review the concept of feed path and feeding
distance, which influence the location and number of feeders. Different options for feeder
position, type and shape are described, followed by the design criteria for determining the
dimensions of feeder and its neck, and finally the design of feedaids.

The direction of solidification inside a casting starts from end regions that solidify first,
to intermediate regions, and ends at the last freezing regions. The feed metal flows in the
reverse direction: from regions at a higher temperature (containing liquid metal) to
adjacent solidifying regions. The entire path, starting from a local hot spot to an end
region is referred to as the feed path. It follows that any intermediate point on a feed path
has only one adjacent point with a higher temperature. The exception is the hot spot,
which is a local temperature maxima. The hot spot effectively feeds all regions along the
feed paths starting from it. Ideally, the hot spot must be inside a feeder, so that the casting
is defect-free. The distance from a feeder to the farthest point along the feed path is
referred to as the feeding distance.

Several researchers such as Pellini and Bishop have experimentally established the
relationship between feeding distance and section thickness for simple shaped steel
castings in sand moulds. The feeding distance is represented by two terms: feeder effect
and end effect. For steel plate castings in sand moulds, the total feeding distance is given
by 4.5 t (from the edge of feeder), where t is the section thickness. Of this, the feeder
effect is 2 t and end effect is 2.5 t. Other researchers have expressed feeding distance in
terms of modulus instead of thickness. The feeding distance is not very well established
for other metals, particularly long freezing range alloys, and does not appear to directly
relate to section thickness (as in the case of steel plate castings).

In complex shaped castings, it is difficult to estimate the feeding distance by the above
relationships. One way to overcome this is by dividing the casting into a number of
simple shaped regions and calculating the modulus of each (the ratio of volume to
cooling surface area). If two adjacent regions have different modulus, then the one with
the higher modulus may be assumed to feed the adjacent region.


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The thermal gradient along the path must be greater than a minimum critical value for
feeding to take place. A value of about 0.5 K/mm for steel castings and 2 K/mm for
aluminium castings (both in sand moulds) is suggested. The critical value is affected by
the casting shape: for example, circular sections require higher gradients than flat
rectangular sections. It also depends on the quality requirement: critical castings (or
sections), which have to be free of even micro-porosity, require higher gradients.

The temperature and gradients at any point along the feed path influence the type of
feeding at that location. If both temperature and gradient are high (near the feeder), mass
feeding takes place by movement of liquid. If temperature is high, but gradient is low
(near the centre of long thick sections), inter-dendritic feeding takes place. Finally, if
temperature is low, but gradient is high (thin end sections), solid feeding takes place.
Improper feeding in the above three zones usually leads to macro porosity, micro-
porosity and surface sink, respectively.

If there is only one major hot spot inside a casting, the feeder must be connected to the
casting face closest to the hot spot. Two or more isolated hot spots located far apart will
require multiple feeders, one for each hot spot. If there are several hot spots, with
different solidification times, the feeder can be first designed for the hottest one, followed
by analysis to verify if the same feeder can also feed any other hot spot. Then a feeder is
designed for the next largest hot spot, and so on. A minor hot spot may be eliminated by
using chills (described later).

Depending on the position, feeders may be classified as top and side. The top feeders are
placed above the hot spot, whereas the side feeders are placed at the side of the hot spot,
usually at the parting line. A top feeder is more effective because of the additional effect
of gravity. It may however, require a core for producing the undercut at its neck. On the
other hand, side feeders do not require a core; also they can be directly fed by hot metal
from the ingates and can remain liquid longer, implying that a smaller feeder can be used.

Feeders are also classified as open or blind, depending on whether the top of the feeder is
open to atmosphere or not. Open feeders lose more heat than blind feeders and therefore
are less efficient. Open feeders are also referred to as risers, since the liquid metal can be
seen rising in them, servicing as useful indicators that the mould has filled completely.
The blind feeders also require an opening to the atmosphere, to enable feed metal flowing
down to the hot spot. This is ensured by placing a special core above a blind feeder.

The feeder location must facilitate fettling and grinding off the feeder mark. This implies
connecting a feeder to a flat surface rather than a curved face of the casting. Also, there
must be sufficient gap around the feeder for ease of fettling as well as for minimizing its
influence on other sections of the casting.

The ideal shape of a feeder is spherical. This has the lowest surface area for a given
volume and therefore the longest solidification time compared to other shapes. In
practice, other shapes are used because of the formation of shrinkage pipe (which may
extend into the casting) and moulding constraints (mainly undercuts). Taller feeders with

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H/D = 2 or more are used for steel castings, which exhibit shrinkage pipe. In iron and
aluminium castings, H/D can be about 1.5. For small castings, cylindrical feeders are
widely used. For larger castings, cylindrical feeders with spherical bottom (side location)
or spherical top (top position, blind type) are widely used. Another shape reported in
literature but not widely used, is the cruciform feeder.

The shape of the feeder neck depends on the feeder shape, feeder position and the
connected portion of the casting. The most widely used neck shapes are cylindrical (for
top cylindrical feeders) and rectangular (mainly for side feeders). The neck may be
tapered down towards the casting. A single or double V-notch may be included in the
neck to facilitate fettling. This does not affect the neck modulus (or its solidification
time) because of low heat transfer from the sharp reentrant corner.

Another major feeder design parameter is the use of insulating or exothermic sleeves and
covers. They essentially increase the effective modulus of the feeder, so that a smaller
feeder can be used and the yield is increased. The shape of the feedaid depends on the
feeder shape. Often the reverse is true, since feedaids are available in standard shape/size.


4.4 Feeder and Feedaid Design

A feeder designed for a given hot spot has to satisfy three major requirements as follows.

Solidification time: The feeder must solidify later than the nearest hot spot, expressed by
the following criterion:
M
f
= k
f
M
h


Where, is the M
f
modulus of the feeder, M
h
is the modulus of the casting region around
the hot spot and k
f
is the feeder design factor, usually more than 1 (more than 1.1 for
ductile iron casting, and more than 1.2 for aluminium and steel castings). If there is an
intermediate section of casting between the feeder and the hot spot, a larger factor may be
needed (say 1.4 or more). Note that the modulus of the hot spot region will increase after
connecting the feeder, because of reduced heat transfer area corresponding to the feeder
neck, and the feeder size must be further increased to take this into account.

Feed path: There must be a clear feed path between the feeder and the hot spot.
Essentially, sufficient thermal gradients must exist for the liquid metal to flow from the
feeder to the hot spot. If the feeder is connected to the casting through a neck, it must be
designed such that the following criteria are satisfied:

M
f
= k
f1
M
n
and M
n
= k
f2
M
h


Where, M
n
is the modulus of the feeder neck. If the feeder cannot be connected to a
casting face near the hot spot, but farther away to another intermediate section i with
modulus M
i
, then the above criterion is modified as follows:


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M
f
= k
f1
M
n
, M
n
= k
f2
M
i
, M
i
= k
f3
M
h


In other words, the modulus must gradually increase from the hot spot to the intermediate
section to feeder neck to feeder, where it must have the highest value. This works for
metals that exhibit volumetric shrinkage during solidification, such as aluminium and
steel castings, and the minimum value of each k
f
can be 1.1. However, in the case of grey
iron and even ductile iron, which expand towards the end of solidification, the value of k
f2

should be less than 1.0 to prevent reverse feeding from the casting to feeder through the
neck.

Feed metal volume: The feeder must compensate solidification shrinkage of the hot spot
region. This requirement is satisfied by the criterion:

f
V
f
= ( V
c
+ V
f
)

where, V
f
and V
c
are the volume of the feeder and the casting, respectively;
f
is the
feeder efficiency (ratio of volume of available feed metal to feeder volume); and is the
volumetric shrinkage of the cast metal. When multiple feeders are used, then V
c

corresponds to the volume of the region fed by a particular feeder. The feeding efficiency
comes into picture because the feeder itself is solidifying and all of its volume is not
available for feeding the casting. The efficiency depends on the feeder shape, type (open
or blind) and application of feedaids (insulation or exothermic). For an open cylindrical
feeder with height = 1.5 times diameter, the efficiency is 14%. It can be much higher
(50% or more) for feeders with insulated or exothermic sleeves and pads. The volumetric
shrinkage ranges from zero for irons, to 3-4% for steels and 6-7% for aluminium alloys.
The feed metal volume check is likely to fail for large castings with thin sections, and
when the same feeder is connected to multiple castings.

Thus the feeder design follows these steps:

1. Estimate the modulus of region around the hot spot in casting.
2. Determine the feeder modulus based on the solidification time criterion.
3. Select the feeder shape, aspect ratio, and then its dimensions based on its modulus.
4. Design the feeder neck based on feed path criterion
5. Recalculate modulus of hot spot region (because of neck) and redesign the feeder.
6. Check the feed metal volume criterion and increase feeder dimensions, if necessary.

Feedaids including chills, insulation and exothermic are used when progressive
directional solidification cannot be achieved by feeders alone. The feedaids are kept in
contact with a particular face of the casting or feeder, altering the local solidification
characteristics.

The chills increase the local rate of heat transfer (compared to other surfaces of the
casting in contact with mould), reducing the local solidification time. Insulating materials
(which reduce the rate of heat transfer) and exothermic materials (which add heat) both
increase the solidification time of the local section.

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Chills are usually made of copper, iron/steel or graphite. They are in the form of
rectangular blocks or cylinders or contoured to match the casting surface (form chills).
The insulation and exothermic materials are usually applied to feeders and are in the
shape of sleeves or covers.

There are three major considerations in feedaid design: the distance to which the feedaid
must be effective, the initial rate of heat transfer required, and the actual amount of heat
to be transferred. We explain these by taking the example of a chill.

Effective distance: The distance to which a chill is effective mainly depends on the
thermal conductivity of the casting material, assuming that the chill is not undersized (a
small chill that gets saturated with heat is less effective). Experimental investigations
have shown that in iron castings (K=73 J/mKs), the chill effect is visible for a distance
equal to 1-1.5 times the section thickness, whereas in aluminium castings (K=238
J/mKs), it is visible for a distance up to 4 times the section thickness. Beyond this
distance, there is no significant change in local cooling rate or solidification time.

Heat transfer rate: It primarily depends on the thermal conductivity K of the chill
material and the area of contact A. An iron chill (K=73 J/mKs) can conduct heat several
orders of magnitude faster than a sand mould, and a copper chill (K=397 J/mKs) is 5
times more conductive than an iron chill. The rate reduces as the chill becomes hotter.

Heat absorption: This is the most important factor in determining the size of the chill, to
ensure that it does not get saturated with heat. The heat absorbed by a chill depends on
the specific heat C and the mass of the chill. Given the specific heats of sand, iron and
copper (1130, 456 and 386 J/kgK, respectively) and their densities (1500, 7800 and 8900
kg/m3, respectively), it is clear that the actual heat transferred for either iron or copper
chill (of same size) is nearly equal, and only about twice as much as a sand mould. In
other words, a chill reduces the effective modulus of the casting section to half of the
original modulus. This has been experimentally proven.

A simplified approach to estimate the effect of a feedaid on solidification characteristics
of a casting is based on modulus extension factor (MEF). Typical values of MEF for
insulation and exothermic materials are 1.4 and 1.8 respectively. In other words, a
smaller feeder (with insulation) will be required for the same solidification time as a
larger feeder (without insulation), thereby improving the yield. A chill may be considered
to an effective MEF of 0.5.

M
f-effective
= (MEF) M
f
= k
f
M
h


where, M
f
is the feeder modulus (without feedaid) and M
f-effective
is the effective modulus.

4.5. Solidification Analysis


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The feeder design can be verified by casting trials to find the location and distribution of
shrinkage porosity. Besides being expensive and time-consuming, shop floor trials may
not provide a complete and correct picture, leading to unexpected defects during regular
production. This can be overcome by virtual casting trials (using simulation software) for
defect prediction and yield optimisation.

Solidification of castings is a non-linear transient phenomenon, posing a challenge in
terms of modelling and analysis. It involves a change of phase with liberation of latent
heat from a moving liquid-solid boundary. The heat is transferred from the molten metal
to solidified portion of the casting, then through the air gap at casting-mould interface
and finally through the mould. All the three modes of heat transfer: conduction,
convection and radiation are involved. The influence of the location of the ingate and the
pouring rate, as well as varying rates of heat transfer in different parts of the mould,
owing to cores, feeding aids and variation in mould thickness have to be accounted for.
The properties of casting and mould materials, which change non-linearly over the range
of temperatures involved, are not easily available and have to be obtained through
detailed experiments. The casting geometry and multiple-cavity moulds make the
analysis even more difficult.

The most important result sought from the solidification analysis is the location and
extent of shrinkage porosity defects. This requires an analysis of heat flow within the
casting, as well as from the casting to the mould, and finally the temperature history of all
points inside the casting. The most important instant of time is when the hottest region
inside the casting is solidifying.

One way is to obtain the temperature history of all points inside the casting, plot the
progress of solidification fronts (isothermal contours) at different instants of time, and
identify the last freezing regions. This approach is implemented using either Finite
Difference Method (FDM) or Finite Element Method (FEM), which essentially involves
dividing the space and time domain into small elements or steps, and solving the
governing equations.

The numerical simulation of solidification process using either Finite Difference or Finite
Element methods (FDM/FEM) involves the following steps:

1. Formulating an accurate mathematical model of the solidification process.
2. Use of accurate values for thermal properties of material involved.
3. Performing the analysis to obtain the temperature history of casting and mould points.
4. Post-processing the results to visualize the solidification pattern and identify defects.

The unsteady state heat transfer involved in solidification of metal in a mould is given by:
2 2 2
2 2 2 p
T T T T
C K
x y z

| | | | | | | |
= + +
| | | |

\ .
\ . \ . \ .

There is loss of heat even as the metal enters the gating system, and during its rise in the
mould cavity. We will however, assume that the mould cavity is instantaneously filled

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with molten metal with an initial temperature. The outer surface of the mould is initially
assumed to be at ambient temperature. The bottom surfaces of the casting are always in
contact with the mould, and the vertical surfaces are in contact with the mould until the
air gap forms. The heat flux across the metal-mould interface is given by the product of
heat transfer coefficient h
g
and temperature difference T across the interface. The
boundary conditions in different regions of the casting and the mould are described next.

Solid-liquid interface: The energy balance is obtained by equating the rate of heat
removed from the solid phase to the sum of the rate of heat supplied to the interface from
the liquid phase and the rate of heat liberated at the interface during solidification. Here
Ksc and K
lc
are the thermal conductivity of the solid and liquid metal, respectively. The L
denotes latent heat, and n denotes the normal to the surface (direction of heat transfer).
( )
sc sc
sc lc sc
T T s
K K L
n n


= +



Casting-mould interface: Before air gap formation, heat is transferred by conduction.
Given T
c
and T
m
are the temperature of the casting and mould, the temperature at casting
mould interface can be found from heat flux w
c m
c m
T T
w K K
n n

= =



After air gap formation, heat transfer is by convection and radiation. Here Tcs and Tms
are the temperature at the casting and mould side of the interface, is the Boltzmanns
constant, is the emmissivity and F is the form factor. The heat flux is:
( ) ( )
{ }
4 4
273 273 *
cs ms g
T
w F T T h T K
n

| |
= + + + =
|

\ .


Outer surface of mould: Heat transfer is by convection. Here T
mo
is the temperature of
the outer surface of mould and T
a
is the ambient temperature.
( )
m
m mo a
T
K h T T
n



The model equations can be solved numerically by using simple explicit finite difference
method. In this method the casting and mould regions are subdivided into small intervals
of constant space (x, y, z in x, y and z direction, respectively) and time interval (t).
The Fig.5.3 below explains the discretization for 2D.


14


Fig.4.3 Space and time discretization in 2D.
The equation can be written using FTCS (forward in time and central in space) explicit
finite difference method as:

( ) ( ) ( )
, , , , 1, , , , 1, , , 1, , , , 1, , , 1 , , , , 1 2
2 2 2
2 2 2
( )
i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k i j k
n
T T T T T T T T T T T
k
O x
C
x y z


+
+ + +
| |
+ + +
= + + + |
|


\ .
The first term on the right hand side is a central finite difference form for second order
derivative of temperature T with respect to space coordinate x, y and z at grid point
(i,j,k). The other term constitutes the truncation error. We can get the solution from above
equation in terms of temperature distribution with respect to space coordinates in casting
and mould region, at the desired time. The solution can be obtained by imposing the
boundary conditions listed earlier, in the basic equation, and marching along the time axis
in a suitable step. The solution becomes unstable if the errors grow while marching. The
appropriate time step (to avoid error accumulation) is determined by applying the
stability criterion given by:
( ) ( ) ( )
2 2 2
1 1 1 1
2
K
C
x y z

| |

+ + |
|

\ .


The results are post-processed to display a color-coded map of temperatures inside the
casting at any instant of time. The temperature map at the end of solidification points out
the last-freezing regions, which are the most probable locations of shrinkage porosity.

4.6 Vector Element Method

This method is a variation of the Boundary Element Method. It is based on determining
the feed path passing through any point inside the casting and following the path back to

15
the local hot spot. The feed path is assumed to lie along the maximum thermal gradient.
The gradient can be determined from Fouriers law of heat conduction as follows:

q = K A T / s
G = ( 1 / K ) w

Where, G = T / s is the thermal gradient and w = q / A is the heat flux at any given
point inside the casting, in any given direction. The gradient (as well as the heat flux) is
zero in a tangential direction to the isotherm passing through the point, and the maximum
in perpendicular direction. The magnitude and direction of the maximum thermal
gradient at any point inside the casting is proportional to the vector resultant of thermal
flux vectors in all directions originating from that point.

w
r
=
i
w
i


The casting volume is divided into a number of pyramidal sectors originating from the
given point, each with a small solid angle. For each sector, the heat content (proportional
to volume) and cooling surface area is determined to compute the flux vector. We take a
step along the resultant flux vector, reach a new location and repeat the computation,
until the resultant flux vector is zero (or close to zero, for computational purpose). The
final location is the hot spot (Fig.5.4). The locus of points along which iterations are
carried out is the feed path (Fig.5.5).

Multiple hot spots inside a casting can be identified by starting the computation from a
number of seed points, each in a different region of the casting.




















Fig.4.4: The resultant flux vector points to the hot spot

16
The method can be easily verified for a 2D shape. The length of a flux vector is given by
a/2, where a is the distance of intersection of a ray from the given point with the casting
boundary. The direction of the ray as well as the flux vector for any sector can be taken
along the angle bisector of the sector.

The method is robust compared to FDM or FEM, since minor errors in computing the
flux vector at any point (arising due to lack of accurate thermo-physical data) are
automatically corrected in subsequent iterations. The VEM has also proved to be much
more efficient (lower memory requirement and 10-100 times faster) than FDM or FEM,
for identifying hot spots in even complex shaped castings.

































Fig4.5: Top: Simple casting with feeder; middle: directional solidification (feed paths);
bottom: progressive solidification in the central section.


17
4.7 Optimization and Validation

The feeding system must be designed to obtain the desired solidification characteristics in
a casting, essentially to avoid solidification shrinkage related defects. At the same time,
the yield must be maximized and fettling problems must be minimized. The feeding
design can be assessed using the following simple criteria. All criteria have been
normalized and have to be maximized.

Internal Porosity: The size of internal porosity in a critical section of the casting must be
less than the acceptable size. Porosity may refer to macro-porosity (usually more than 1
mm size), or micro-porosity (0.01-0.1 mm), which is barely visible to the naked eye. We
can also introduce a middle term called mini-porosity for intermediate sizes (0.1-1 mm).
The criterion is written as:
C
F1
= 1 - max
i
(d
i
) / d
max


Where, max
i
(d
i
) gives the maximum size of porosity in the casting and d
max
is the
maximum allowable size of porosity (quality specification, determined from functional
requirements).

Feeder efficiency: The feeder efficiency is the ratio of total feed metal required to the
total volume of feeders. This is compared with the maximum possible efficiency of the
feeder. The criterion is given by:

C
F2
= ( V
c
+
i
V
fi
) / (
f-max

i
V
fi
)

where, V
c
is the casting volume, V
fi
is the volume of feeder i and is the volumetric
shrinkage of the cast metal. The maximum efficiency of a feeder depends on its shape
and use of feedaids. Open cylindrical feeders have low efficiency (less than 15%); an
exothermic cover and sleeve increases its efficiency to 70% or more.

Feeder yield: The volume of the feeders must be minimized to increase the yield. The
criterion is given by:
C
F3
= N
c
v
c
/ ( N
c
v
c
+
i
v
fi
)

Where, N
c
is the number of casting cavities per mould, v
c
is the volume of each cavity
and v
fi
is the volume of feeder i.

Fettling: The size of the feeder connection (neck) must be small compared to the
connected portion of the casting to avoid breakage or cracks in casting during fettling.
When several feeders are present, the feeder that is most likely to cause damage to the
casting determines the criteria assessment value.

C
F4
= min
i
( 1 ( t
fi
/ t
ci
)

Where, t
fi
is the smallest dimension of the neck of feeder i and t
ci
is the thickness of the
connected potion of casting.

18
A poor design of feeding system (feeders, necks and feedaids) can lead to solidification
shrinkage related defects in the casting. These include macro, mini or micro-porosity,
shrinkage pipe (extending into the casting) and surface sink. Other defects, caused by
subsequent cooling of the casting, include casting distortion and cracks. Based on their
location, the defects can be classified as external, subsurface or internal. The most widely
used experimental techniques for feeding design validation are briefly described below.

Thermocouple method: In this method, thermocouples are embedded in the mould at
strategic points: end sections, center of thick sections, along the feeder axis and along the
centerline of long thick sections. Then the metal is poured into the mould and for each
thermocouple, the temperature history is recorded. The results can be used for plotting
the time-temperature curves for different locations inside the casting, indicating the
progress of solidification. The thermocouples must be chosen to minimize heat
absorption. The method is more suitable for theoretical studies in a lab.

Non-destructive testing: The casting is inspected using radiography (for internal defects)
and dye penetration (for sub-surface defects with some opening to the surface). Other
methods include magnetic particle and ultrasound, but these are more indirect methods
and require considerable expertise for interpreting the readings accurately.

Sectioning and machining: This is the most widely used method in practice for
industrial castings. All suspected regions of the casting are cut through, polished and
visually inspected. The sections are usually made through the center planes of feeders and
their necks, thick sections of the casting (example, bosses) and junctions of two or more
walls. Machining and drilling of specified features is also carried out. The method is
however, not as reliable as it seems. It is possible to cut a section and assume that the
region is defect-free, when a major porosity may be lying in a parallel plane just a few
mm away. Also, the machined or drilled surface may appear perfect, but further
machining may bring out porosity.


Fig.4.6: Feeder design over, borderline and robust

In general, successful experimental validation of sample castings does not guarantee
defect-free production castings. This may happen owing to borderline optimization of
feeding design, when the feeders (especially their connection with casting) does not leave
any safety margin for variation in process parameters (such as metal composition and
pouring temperature). The feeding must be slightly over-designed and made sufficiently
robust to avoid such surprises during regular production.

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