[0001] The present invention relates to a die casting process for producing internal combustion
engine components from a light alloy, in particular, aluminium alloy to which ceramic
particles are added.
[0002] Italian Patent n.1.119.287 filed on 20 June, 1979, and entitled: "Process and device
for preparing a metal alloy mixture comprising a solid and liquid phase", the content
of which is incorporated herein purely by way of reference as required, relates to
a static mixer consisting of a cylindrical runner housing a series of helical blades,
for casting and partially solidifying a metal alloy as it is fed through the mixer,
while at the same time mixing the newly formed solid phase with the remaining liquid
phase. This produces, at the output of the mixer, a relatively low-viscosity solid/liquid
mixture in which the solid phase of the alloy is uniformly suspended in the liquid
alloy.
[0003] For the solid/liquid mixture to remain stable long enough for ladling and casting,
it must be produced under steady fluid dynamic conditions, with accurate, rapid control
of the physical and dynamic parameters involved in the casting process (temperature,
alloy cooling rate, speed through the mixer, etc.). For this purpose, the present
Applicant has perfected a semiliquid casting process as described in Italian Patent
Application n.67 627-A/89, filed on 25.07.1989, and entitled: "Continuous semiliquid
casting process and furnace", the content of which is incorporated herein purely by
way of reference as required. According to the above process, the static mixer is
connected to a pressurized tiltable reverberatory furnace, for casting under steady
conditions, and is equipped with a barometric column enabling it to be refilled without
interrupting or affecting steady flow of the casting.
[0004] Metal alloys produced using semiliquid casting processes as described above are said
to be "rheocast", and present particularly good microstructural characteristics. Rheocast
light alloys, in fact, have recently be found to present a globular as opposed to
a traditional dendritic microstructure, thus resulting in improved fluid dynamic characteristics
(temperatures within the solidification range). Despite the above advantages, however,
known semiliquid casting processes have yet to be applied to the manufacture of internal
combustion engine components, which, for cost reasons, are normally die cast. A major
drawback of die casting is the formation of blowholes in the casting, resulting from
the turbulence produced by the high speed at which the liquid alloy is injected. Another
drawback is inevitable shrinkage of the casting as it solidifies, and which is proportional
to the temperature at which the alloy is injected (which, for liquid aluminium alloy
is usually 700°C). Though cheap to produce, the poor quality of current die cast components
therefore makes the use of finer quality alloys unfeasible.
[0005] Apart from the fact that they cannot be used for die casting, the above consideration
also applies to various recently marketed alloys reinforced with ceramic particles
to give 20 to 30% greater mechanical strength as compared with nonreinforced alloys
of the same type. In fact, even assuming the reinforcing particles (which, being ceramic,
melt at a much higher temperature than light alloy) could be maintained evenly dispersed
in the molten alloy, e.g. by stirring it, the problem still remains of preventing
the particles from separating from the alloy and accumulating in one part of the casting
by force of gravity and, more especially, the dynamic thrust exerted on the particles
as the molten alloy is fed, in this case, under turbulent flow conditions, through
the gate.
[0006] It is an object of the present invention to provide a process enabling low-cost manufacture
of metal alloy die castings with substantially no defects, and using fine quality
metal alloys, possibly also containing uniformly dispersed ceramic reinforcing elements.
[0007] According to the present invention, there is provided a process for producing die
castings, in particular, light alloy internal combustion engine components, characterized
by the fact that it comprises stages consisting in:
- melting a metal alloy until it is fully liquid;
- casting said metal alloy in semiliquid form by feeding it, as it solidifies and under
laminar flow conditions, through a static mixer for mixing the liquid alloy uniformly
with a solid phase, which separates from the liquid alloy to produce a temporary stable
solid-liquid suspension at the output of the mixer;
- solidifying said solid-liquid suspension into rheocast ingots wherein the metal alloy
presents a globular micrographic structure;
- dividing said rheocast ingots into a number of ingots of predetermined weight;
- heating said ingots to a temperature within the solidification range of said metal
alloy, to convert the globular-structure metal alloy into paste form;
- feeding said ingots, one at a time, into the injection chamber of a die casting machine;
and
- injecting said globular-structure alloy, heated to a temperature within the solidification
range of the alloy, into a mold.
[0008] According to the present invention, there is also provided a process for die casting
aluminium alloy, characterized by the fact that it consists in heating an ingot, produced
by casting said alloy in semiliquid form to produce a globular micrographic structure
of the alloy, to a temperature within the solidification range of the alloy and such
as to reduce the alloy to a highly viscous, semiliquid form; and in subsequently exerting
mechanical pressure on the ingot.
[0009] A non-limiting embodiment of the present invention will be described by way of example
with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig.s 1 and 2 show schematic views of the various stages in the process according
to the present invention;
Fig.s 3 and 4 show respective microphotographs of the same metal alloy before and
after certain stages in the process according to the present invention.
[0010] With reference to Fig.s 1 and 2, pigs 1 of a metal alloy, in the example shown, light
aluminium-based casting alloy UNI 3600 (UNI coding) are first melted normally in a
known pot furnace 2. According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
the initial alloy is A356, a casting alloy produced and marketed by ALCAN of San Diego
(CA) U.S.A., which presents a nominal matrix of 93% Al and 7% Si in which is dispersed
uniformly a ceramic phase consisting, in this case, of SiC (silicon carbide) particles.
These, with a volumetric percentage of 20% for a given composition, provide for a
roughly 30% improvement in the mechanical characteristics of the alloy and, in particular,
a roughly 35% reduction in thermal expansion, which is thus similar to that of steel.
In this case, furnace 2 is equipped with a known mechanical mixer 3 (or other similar
known means not shown for the sake of simplicity) for maintaining the SiC particles
uniformly dispersed in the molten alloy.
[0011] Once the initial alloy is fully liquefied (except for any suspended SiC particles,
which melt at a much higher temperature than the alloy), the resulting liquid phase
4 (possibly also containing solid SiC particles) is fed into a pressurized rocking
furnace 6 as described in Italian Patent Application n. 67627-A/89, filed by the present
Applicant on 25.07.1989, and the content of which is incorporated herein purely by
way of reference as required; which furnace 6 is connected to a known static mixer
7 as described in Italian Patent n. 1.119.287 filed on 20 June, 1979, and the content
of which is also incorporated herein purely by way of reference as required.
[0012] Liquid phase 4 is then cast as described in the above patents, the mixer 7 being
cooled so as to separate from liquid phase 4, as it is fed through mixer 7, a solid
phase (not shown) which gradually increases as the alloy is cooled through mixer 7,
and which is mixed uniformly with liquid phase 4 to produce a temporary stable solid-liquid
suspension 8 at the output of mixer 7. During this stage, any solid SiC particles
in the original alloy are also mixed continually with liquid phase 4 in mixer 7 to
form an integral part of suspension 8 with no risk of the particles being segregated.
[0013] Suspension 8 is cast, for example, in an ingot mold 10 to produce an ingot 11 consisting
of the original metal alloy, and possibly also containing dispersed SiC particles,
but which, due to being cast in semiliquid form, presents an entirely different crystal
structure. In pig 1 form, for example, a UNI 3600 alloy presents a dendritic structure
as shown in Fig.3, whereas, when rheocast (i.e. cast in semiliquid form through mixer
7) and solidified, the same alloy presents a globular structure as shown in Fig.4.
[0014] Ingot 11 is then divided, e.g. cut mechanically using known means, such as a circular
saw, into a number of smaller ingots 12, each, including the feedhead and channels,
roughly equal to the weight of the component for casting, and which are fed, in stainless
steel containers 13 (Fig.2), into an electric resistance furnace 14, preferably specially
designed and equipped with automatic robot handling devices 15, where they are heated
(for 50-60 minutes) to a temperature within the solidification range of the initial
metal alloy. The rheocast globular-structure alloy of ingots 12 (with or without uniformly
dispersed SiC particles) thus assumes a semiliquid state having, in the example shown,
a liquid phase percentage of roughly 50% by volume, i.e. substantially the same as
at the semiliquid casting stage through mixer 7.
[0015] When cast through mixer 7, however, the semiliquid alloy, by virtue of mixer 7, presents
at most a viscosity of a few P, whereas, in ingot 12 form, by appropriately selecting
the chemical composition and the heating temperature within the solidification range
of the initial alloy (roughly 580°C for aluminium alloys), the same semiliquid alloy,
but with a globular structure and heated to said temperature within the solidification
range of the initial alloy, has been found to present substantially pseudoplastic
rheologic characteristics and a viscosity at rest of about 10⁷ P. At the output of
furnace 14, the alloy of ingots 12 therefore presents a pasty, pudding-like consistency
preventing the segregation of any solid ceramic particles, which thus remain uniformly
dispersed in the alloy, and enabling ingots 12 to maintain their shape.
[0016] Ingots 12 processed as described above are then fed one at a time on to a known die
casting machine 18 (not described in detail) fitted with the same molds normally used
for liquid alloys, with the exception of the gates, the thickness of which is increased
from 0.8:1 mm to 2:2.5 mm to assist throughput of the semiliquid alloy. The semiliquid
ingot 12 is fed into a known injection chamber 20 on machine 18, where it is subjected
by a piston 21 to a predetermined mechanical pressure, equal to that usually employed
for die casting liquid alloys, e.g. 650 Kg/cm², and injected into a mold 22 where
the alloy solidifies to produce a finished casting 25 consisting, for example, of
an internal combustion engine component, such as an injection manifold.
[0017] By virtue of the semiliquid form in which it is fed into chamber 20, however, the
alloy, as compared with a liquid alloy of the same composition, presents a much higher
viscosity and, therefore, a very low Reynolds number, thus enabling injection under
laminar flow conditions, as opposed to turbulent flow conditions typical of known
liquid alloy die casting processes. The high viscosity at rest combined with laminar-flow
injection of the alloy provides, on the one hand, for preventing the inclusion of
air bubbles and the formation of blowholes in the finished casting, and, on the other,
for preventing the segregation of any solid ceramic particles contained in the semiliquid
alloy fed on to machine 18, which particles therefore remain uniformly dispersed both
in the semiliquid alloy injected into mold 22 and in the finished casting 25. Nor
is the injection stage in any way hampered by the high viscosity at rest of the semiliquid
globular alloy, which, being pseudoplastic, reduces its viscosity, when subjected
to pressure by piston 21, to a P value of a few tens, compatible with low energy consumption
of machine 18.
1. A process for producing die castings, in particular, light alloy internal combustion
engine components, characterized by the fact that it comprises stages consisting in:
- melting a metal alloy until it is fully liquid;
- casting said metal alloy in semiliquid form by feeding it, as it solidifies and
under laminar flow conditions, through a static mixer for mixing the liquid alloy
uniformly with a solid phase, which separates from the liquid alloy to produce a temporary
stable solid-liquid suspension at the output of the mixer;
- solidifying said solid-liquid suspension into rheocast ingots wherein the metal
alloy presents a globular micrographic structure;
- dividing said rheocast ingots into a number of ingots of predetermined weight;
- heating said ingots to a temperature within the solidification range of said metal
alloy, to convert the globular-structure metal alloy into paste form;
- feeding said ingots, one at a time, into the injection chamber of a die casting
machine; and
- injecting said globular-structure alloy, heated to a temperature within the solidification
range of the alloy, into a mold.
2. A process as claimed in Claim 1, characterized by the fact that said ingots are produced
by mechanically cutting said rheocast ingots, and each present the same weight as
the component for casting.
3. A process as claimed in Claim 1 or 2, characterized by the fact that said ingots are
fed, inside respective stainless steel containers, into a preheating furnace in which
they are heated to said temperature within the solidification range of the metal alloy.
4. A process as claimed in any one of the foregoing Claims, characterized by the fact
that said temperature within the solidification of said alloy and the chemical composition
of said alloy are so selected that said globular-structure alloy heated to a temperature
within the solidification range of the alloy assumes substantially pseudoplastic rheologic
characteristics and a viscosity at rest of about 10⁷ P.
5. A process as claimed in Claim 4, characterized by the fact that, during said injection
stage, said metal alloy comprises a solid phase and a liquid phase; said solid phase
being equal to at least 50% by volume.
6. A process as claimed in any one of the foregoing Claims, characterized by the fact
that said melting stage consists in melting pigs of aluminium alloy containing a predetermined
percentage of a finely dispersed ceramic material phase; and is conducted in a pot
furnace equipped with mixing means.
7. A process as claimed in Claim 6, characterized by the fact that said ceramic phase
consists of silicon carbide particles.
8. A process for die casting aluminium alloy, characterized by the fact that it consists
in heating an ingot, produced by casting said alloy in semiliquid form to produce
a globular micrographic structure of the alloy, to a temperature within the solidification
range of the alloy and such as to reduce the alloy to a highly viscous, semiliquid
form; and in subsequently exerting mechanical pressure on the ingot.
9. A process as claimed in Claim 8, characterized by the fact that it employs molds having
a gate at least 100% larger than normal size.
10. A process as claimed in Claim 8 or 9, characterized by the fact that it employs an
aluminium alloy containing a uniformly dispersed ceramic material phase.