Background of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a method and an apparatus employed to control the
solidification of metal alloys, specifically Ni-base superalloys, in an electron beam
melting (EBM) and ingot casting operation.
[0002] For certain applications, particularly aerospace applications wherein nickel-base
superalloy ingots are commonly employed, the ingot structure desirable is one free
from structural imperfections. As used in this sense, the term imperfection includes
but is not limited to laps, cold shuts, porosity, non-uniform grain size, and chemical
segregation resulting in cracking or non-uniform mechanical properties. EBM processes
provide a means to control the ingot structure and to minimize or eliminate imperfections
by controlling heat input to the solidifying ingot. A further desired feature of such
ingots is that they be free of oxide inclusions larger than the grain size of the
finished component, as such inclusions adversely affect low cycle fatigue properties
of the component. It is possible in some EBM processes to float oxide inclusions out
of the molten metal prior to the inclusions entering the ingot mold with the molten
metal.
[0003] Two basic methods are generally employed in EBM processes for producing metal alloys,
namely drip melting and hearth melting. Generally, the end product formed in these
processes is an ingot solidified from the molten metal in a casting mold. The drip
melting process employs a feed stock electrode, which is melted using electron beams,
and the molten metal droplets fall on the upper surface of the ingot being cast. By
comparison, the hearth-melting process employs a feedstock melted by electron beams
wherein the molten metal is collected in a horizontal trough, or hearth, and is maintained
as a liquid in the hearth by use of additional electron beams directed onto the surface
of the hearth. This molten metal is then conveyed to a pour notch disposed over the
ingot mold. It is known in the art in both of these processes that electron beams
may further be used to heat the upper surface of the metal in the mold to influence
the solidification and cooling of the solidifying ingot. proper cooling of the ingot
is required in order to produce the desired alloy solidification structure and surface
condition of the ingot.
[0004] Methods for production of uniform fine grain ingots by the EBM drip process have
previously been proposed. As an example, one approach employs a continuous casting
method in which the upper surface temperature of the ingot is maintained below the
solidus temperature of the alloy but still above a temperature which promotes metallurgical
bonding between the molten metal droplets and the ingot surface. In this process,
no means are employed for measuring the ingot surface temperature for use in controlling
the drip rate and deposition pattern. Also, in this process, the application of heat
input to the upper ingot surface has generally been regarded as undesirable, possibly
because of the absence of means for taking direct surface temperature measurements
for controlling drip rate and deposition pattern. The result of the use of temperatures
at or below the alloy solidus is that the product is not a true ingot casting, but
rather is an accumulation of metallurgically bonded solidified droplets which form
pores and entrap contaminants, such as oxide inclusions, in the structure.
[0005] EBM hearth processes have heretofore also been proposed for the purpose of producing
ingots with desired internal structures together with acceptable surface conditions,
although the processes have not met with complete success. Such prior processes generally
involved visual observation of the molten pool surface and temperature measurements
of a discrete location or locations made by a two-color pyrometer, while an operator
used such information in attempting to manually control the electron beam power and
impingement pattern in order to produce a desired pool surface temperature with the
object of yielding the desired ingot solidification structure. To date, this method
of process monitoring has proved to be inadequate in attaining the required accuracy
in controlling the beam power and impingement pattern to produce the desired ingot
solidification structures.
[0006] In one previous approach to ingot casting by an EBM hearth process, the objective
of the process has been to maintain the pool surface temperature at the center of
the mold at a temperature slightly below the liquidus temperature of the alloy, while
maintaining the temperature at the edges of the pool slightly above the alloy liquidus
temperature. The former temperature was selected in order to create solid crystallites
to act as "seeds" from which the ingot would solidify, and the latter temperature
was selected in order to prevent cold shuts or laps from forming at the edges of the
ingot. This process has the advantage that the central pool temperatures can be monitored
visually because the formation of the crystallites provides a visual indication that
the temperature is in fact below the alloy liquidus. As discussed above, however,
visual observation and manual control of the pool surface temperature do not provide
the degree of control accuracy which is required to produce ingots having the desired
solidification structures.
[0007] This method has a further disadvantage in that the temperature gradients produced
on the ingot pool surface in practicing this method also give rise to unacceptably
rapid fluid convection in the pool. The rapid pool convection has the potential to
take undesirable oxide inclusions from the surface and entrap them in the solidifying
ingot. Additionally, the deliberate temperature gradient produced on the surface in
this method results in a non-uniform microstructure in the solidified ingot. One further
disadvantage which has been noted in association with this approach is that, when
the pool temperature employed is below the liquidus, a very shallow ingot pool is
evidenced, and the solidification structures produced are exceptionally sensitive
to small changes in the energy applied in the form of beam heating, making the process
even more difficult to properly execute and control.
[0008] It is therefore a principal object of the present invention to provide an apparatus
for casting a molten metallic material in the form of an ingot wherein the solidification
is accurately controlled to produce a predetermined desired solidification structure
in the ingot.
[0009] It is another object of the present invention to employ an imaging radiometer in
combination with an EBM hearth or drip melting apparatus, wherein the imaging radiometer
is positioned to measure the upper molten pool surface temperature and provide an
image related to temperature distribution across the surface.
[0010] It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for casting a molten
metallic material in the form of an ingot, wherein the method includes accurately
measuring and monitoring the upper molten pool surface temperature, and directing
a stream of electron beams at the upper molten pool surface to maintain a substantially
uniform temperature across substantially the entire upper molten pool surface.
[0011] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method for casting a
molten metallic material in ingot form, wherein the upper molten pool surface temperature
is measured by an imaging radiometer and an image related to temperature distribution
across the surface is produced by the imaging radiometer, the image being employed
to control the intensity and areas of impingement of streams of electrons directed
toward the upper molten pool surface in order to maintain the substantially uniform
temperature across the molten pool surface.
Summary of the Invention
[0012] The above and other objects of the present invention are accomplished by providing
an apparatus for casting a molten metallic material in ingot form by way of an electron
beam melting (EBM) hearth or drip process, wherein an imaging radiometer is employed
to measure the upper surface temperature of a molten pool in a casting mold, to provide
an image related to the temperature distribution across the surface or to provide
signals representative of this temperature distribution. The apparatus is equipped
with an electron beam gun or guns which are used to direct a stream or streams of
electrons at the molten pool surface in order to achieve or maintain a predetermined
molten pool surface temperature distribution, this temperature distribution being
monitored and verified by the imaging radiometer.
[0013] In the method according to the present invention, an EBM hearth or drip process designed
to cast molten metallic material into ingot form in a mold is provided, the method
including the steps of measuring the upper surface temperature distribution of the
molten pool, and selectively positioning and modulating the intensity of a stream
of electrons directed at the molten pool surface in order to maintain a desired preselected
temperature distribution on the molten pool surface. Important aspects of the method
include maintaining a substantially uniform temperature distribution across substantially
the entire molten pool surface. That temperature preferably is maintained slightly
above the alloy liquidus temperature of the metallic material being cast into ingot
form.
[0014] Further features of the apparatus and method of the present invention include the
use of a blackbody reference radiation source disposed adjacent to the molten pool
surface in the mold to enable a periodic check of the calibration accuracy of the
imaging radiometer and measurement of sight port transmission losses during furnace
operation. Additionally, the electron beam gun control system employed to aim the
electron beam or beams at desired areas or regions of the molten pool surface and
to modulate the intensity of the stream or streams of electrons, is operatively connected
to an output of the imaging radiometer, wherein a video display of the detected temperature
distribution may be used to assist an operator in directing streams of electrons at
particular regions of the molten pool surface in order to maintain the preselected
surface temperature profile. Alternatively, the coupling of the output of the imaging
radiometer to the electron beam gun control may be operatively connected with means
for receiving the output signals and means for automatically controlling the aiming
and intensity of the electron beams.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0015] These and other features of the present invention and the attendant advantages will
be readily apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art and the invention will
be more easily understood from the following detailed description of the preferred
embodiments of the present invention, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings
wherein like reference characters represent like parts throughout the several views.
[0016] FIG. 1 is a schematic sectional view illustrating a representative embodiment of
an EBM hearth apparatus according to the present invention.
[0017] FIG. 2 is a schematic view of the mold section of an EBM furnace, an imaging radiometer,
and associated components in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present
invention.
Detailed Description of the Invention
[0018] Referring initially to FIG. 1, a representative embodiment of an EBM hearth apparatus
suitable for practicing the present invention is schematically illustrated. A hearth
10 comprises hearth bed 12 containing cooling pipes 14 through which water or another
cooling liquid may be circulated. The hearth bed in this embodiment comprises a means
for transporting the molten metallic material to an ingot mold, as will be described
in more detail later in the specification. At the inlet end of the hearth, a bar 16
of metal-alloy to be refined and cast into an ingot is moved continuously toward the
hearth in a known manner as indicated by arrow A. The raw material supplied to the
hearth 10 may alternatively be in particulate form such as small fragments or compacted
briquettes of the material to be cast into an ingot.
[0019] A first directionally controllable energy input device 18, preferably a conventional
electron beam gun 18, is mounted above the hearth and is used to heat and melt the
end of the metal alloy bar 16 extending over the hearth bed 12, such that a stream
of molten metallic material 20 flows into the hearth bed to create a pool 22 of molten
material. The purpose of providing the hearth bed 12 with cooling pipes 14, through
which cooling liquid flows, is to form a solid skull 24 of the material on the inner
surface of the hearth bed 12 to protect the bed from degradation by the molten material
and to minimize the possibility that the molten material will pick up contaminants
from the hearth bed.
[0020] Additional directionally controllable energy input devices, represented by electron
beam gun 26, may be employed to maintain the material in a molten state and at a desired
preselected temperature for supplying the material to the ingot mold 28.
[0021] It is to be noted that because electron beam guns 18, 26 are used as the energy source
for melting the alloy bar 16 and maintaining a molten pool, the hearth bed 12 and
mold 28 depicted in FIG. 1 are enclosed in a vacuum housing 30, represented schematically
in FIG. 1, in a manner well known in the art.
[0022] At the end of the hearth opposite that where the metal alloy bar 16 is melted, a
pouring lip 32 is provided in the form of an opening in the hearth wall. The pouring
lip 32 permits the molten metallic material to flow out of the hearth into ingot mold
28, in which the metallic material is solidified into an ingot 34 as a result of radiant
cooling from the surface of the molten metal as well as by conduction through the
ingot mold 28, which preferably has cooling tubes 36 carrying a cooling fluid such
as water to cool the mold. The ingot 34 is withdrawn downwardly through an opening
29 in the bottom of mold 28 in the direction of arrow B in a known manner, preferably
at a continuous substantially uniform rate. This withdrawal rate is also preferably
about the same rate at which the solidification front of the ingot advances upwardly
toward the surface of the mold.
[0023] As indicated previously, the temperature of the molten metallic material leaving
the hearth to enter the mold is preferably superheated to a temperature above the
alloy liquidus temperature, for example, between 30°C and 100°C above the liquidus
temperature. A pyrometer may preferably be provided to monitor the temperature of
the material at the pour lip 32, in a manner known in the art. This temperature reading
may be employed to control the electron beam guns 18, 26, as necessary, either manually
or by way of an automatic control system, for example, operatively connected to the
pyrometer and the controls for the electron beam guns.
[0024] The molten metallic material 38 supplied from the pouring lip 32 to the mold forms
a pool 40 of molten metal at the top of the mold. The portion adjacent to the inner
surface of the mold has a tendency to solidify more rapidly than the center portion
of the pool because of the cooling tubes 36 in the adjacent mold. One or more directionally
controllable energy input devices are provided, depicted schematically as electron
beam guns 42, 44, which are employed to control the surface temperature of the pool
40 in order to control the solidification of the ingot such that a desired preselected
solidification structure is produced in the ingot.
[0025] To this point, the EBM process and apparatus described are of a substantially conventional
nature. Referring now to FIG. 2, the mold section of the EBM furnace of FIG. 1 is
shown and described in further detail. The vacuum housing 30 encloses this section
as also shown in FIG. 1. Two electron beam guns 42, 44 are disposed on the vacuum
housing or chamber, and are adapted to direct streams of electrons at the surface
of the pool 40 of molten metallic material.
[0026] At the top of the vacuum chamber 30, a sight port 46 is provided in order to permit
imaging radiometer 48 to view the upper surface of the metal in the ingot mold 28.
Sight ports have heretofore been employed in EBM furnaces and preferably contain a
lead glass for x-ray protection as well as pyrex, quartz, or similar heat resistant,window
materials. The imaging radiometer 48, details of which will be discussed later, is
preferably of the type disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,687,344, assigned to the assignee
of the present invention, the subject matter of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The imaging radiometer 48 is disposed outside the sight port, and preferably in a
position such that the sight path of the radiometer intercepts the surface of the
melt pool 40 at a normal incidence, in order to limit the effects of reflections and
other spurious sources of light. An imaging radiometer sensor-based melt temperature
control has been previously disclosed in U.S. Patent No. 4,656,331, assigned to the
assignee of the present invention, the subject matter of which is hereby incorporated
by reference.
[0027] Located inside the chamber 30, adjacent the ingot mold 28 and within the field of
view of radiometer 48, is a blackbody reference source 50. A Mikron Instruments Model
Blackbody can be modified for operation inside an operating EBM hearth furnace, and
would be suitable for use as radiation reference source 50. The blackbody provides
a means for periodically checking the calibration accuracy of imaging radiometer 48
and provides the imaging radiometer with means by which changes in the sight port
46 window transmittance may be detected and compensated for during furnace operation.
Such changes in transmittance can be caused by condensation or other loss mechanisms.
A dip thermocouple 52 is also preferably disposed in a position where it can be employed
to provide spot calibrations of the alloy emissivity, the thermocouple 52 being shown
in FIG. 2 at a lowered operating position. Because there is a risk that the thermocouple
will contaminate the alloy, the calibration made by the thermocouple is preferably
only performed at the beginning or at the conclusion of a melt processing run or in
conjunction with the collecting of a sample. In any event, the use of the imaging
radiometer obviates the need for more frequent use of the dip thermocouple, as a continuous
measurement of temperature across the entire surface is provided.
[0028] The imaging radiometer 48, in the depicted preferred embodiment in FIG. 2, employs
a Charge Injection Device (CID) silicon detector array 54, which is filtered externally
by spectral band filter 56 to respond to a predetermined range of wavelengths, for
example, 700 to 1, 100 nanometers. The selection of this range may depend on the spectral
transmission characteristics of the materials making up the sight port 46, and the
choice of usable radiometers may be limited to those which operate in the visible
or shorter infrared wavelength regions . A near-infrared neutral density filter 58
is preferably mounted ahead of the spectral band filter in order to expand the response
range of the radiometer 48. A lens 60 is provided for the radiometer 48, and optionally,
a polarizing filter 62 is disposed between the lens 60 and the sight port 46 to limit
reflections from the molten pool 40 surface.
[0029] A video signal is output from the imaging radiometer 48, which is focused on the
surface of the melt pool 40, the signal corresponding to the detected emissivity information.
The signal, which may conform to either U.S. (e.g. EIA RS-170) or European standard,
may be directly displayed or may be processed further. As depicted in FIG. 2, the
video signal, instead of being directly displayed, is fed to a video analyzer 64.
The video analyzer preferably provides a continuous graphical signal intensity, i.e.,
object temperature and temperature distribution, display or overlay on a video monitor
66. The video analyzer 64 must be calibrated and adjusted where necessary to establish
a direct correspondence between the target object (melt pool 40) radiant intensity,
as measured by the imaging radiometer, and the graphical display and output signals
of the video analyzer. Video monitor 66 preferably displays the temperature and the
temperature distribution by using a full-field-of-view image 67 showing in gray tone
or pseudocolor the distribution across the entire surface of the melt or mold pool
40, and, in addition, by displaying a graphical profile 69 of the actual temperature
measured.
[0030] A video analyzer which is particularly suitable for use in the present invention
is the Model 321 Video Analyzer made by Colorado Video of Boulder, Colorado. The video
analyzer also preferably provides a manual and erternal means for directing a pair
of cursors 68, one horizontal and one vertical, over the image displayed on the monitor
66 to pinpoint and extract the intensity (measured temperature) of any particular
point or pixel in the image displayed on the monitor, and for supplying a voltage
which is proportional to the extracted intensity to one or more predetermined erternal
devices. As depicted in FIG. 2, an electron gun beam control computer 70 is provided,
and is connected to the video analyzer 64, receiving the voltage signal related to
the detected pixel intensity through video analyzer output channel 72. The video analyzer
64 preferably has additional input/output channels, represented by channel lines 74,
76 in FIG. 2 which are adapted to provide cursor address signals to erternal devices
such as computer 70, and to receive cursor positioning signals from an external device,
in this instance, also computer 70.
[0031] A video color quantizer 78 may be provided to further process the video signal, which
may be passed through the video analyzer in the configuration depicted in FIG. 2.
The video color quantizer is used to display discrete, user-set, gray scale intensity
levels as step-tone colors on the video monitor. The gray-tone display of the video
analyzer generally provides improved definition of fine spatial details in the target
object, whereas the pseudocolor intensity-mapped display generated by the video color
quantizer is useful when performing control adjustment sin the electron gun parameters
to bring larger areas of the melt pool surface to a common temperature, which would
be indicated in the display by a single solid color. A commercially available video
color quantizer which is suitable for use in the present invention is the Colorado
Video Model 606.
[0032] An operator's control console 80 is provided for use in controlling the electron
gun parameters, e.g., power or intensity and beam pattern, in maintaining the predetermined
temperature profile in the surface of the melt pool 40. If the EBM furnace is intended
to operate on a strictly automated basis, the control console may be omitted from
the apparatus. The control console 80 is linked with the electron gun beam control
computer which relays commands from the control console to the electron guns 42, 44.
An operator would manipulate the controls to generate commands to modulate the beam
power or intensity as well as to adjust the beam impingement pattern on the mold pool
surface.
[0033] The operation of the apparatus in practicing the method of the present invention
for casting molten metallic material in the form of an ingot will now be addressed.
The method generally involves heating, melting and transporting the metallic material
to a mold means or ingot mold 28, having an opening in the bottom thereof for withdrawing
the ingot, the method further including measuring the surface temperature and temperature
distribution of the mold pool 40 using an imaging radiometer, controlling the surface
temperature distribution to achieve a desired predetermined temperature and distribution,
the control being effected by selective positioning of and selective modulation of
the intensity of at least one electron beam gun positioned to direct a stream of electrons
at the mold pool surface, and cooling and removing the solidified ingot from the mold.
The desired predetermined surface temperature and temperature distribution are selected
to produce a desired, preselected metallurgical structure in the solidified ingot.
[0034] The heating, melting and transporting of the metallic material are generally known
in the art of EBM hearth melting processes, and for that matter, in EBM drip melting
processes, which may also be employed in practicing the present invention.
[0035] The present invention focuses on the use of an imaging radiometer 48 and its associated
components described with respect to FIG. 2 in controlling the temperature of the
melt pool surface of the solidifying ingot in order to obtain a desired preselected
metallurgical structure in the alloy ingot. The method for casting a molten metallic
material in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention is primarily
directed to producing ingots of a nickel-base superalloy, however, the method may
also be practiced with other metallic materials, for example, titanium-base alloys,
zirconium-base alloys, niobium-base alloys, cobalt-base alloys, iron-base alloys,
and intermetallic aluminide alloys
[0036] It is an important aspect of the method of the present invention to maintain a substantially
uniform temperature across the surface of melt pool 40. It was recognized, in accordance
with the present invention, that variations in temperature across the surface of the
melt pool 40 in the ingot mold 28 not only result in variations in the solidification
structure due to varying rates of solidification, but also caused excessive mold pool
convection, which commonly leads to entrapment of oxides or other undesirable inclusions
in the ingot. The oxides, which would generally tend to float on the mold pool surface,
may be dragged below the surface and trapped when the pool is undergoing excessive
convection.
[0037] A second important aspect of the present invention is that the temperature of the
surface of the mold pool is desirably maintained above the liquidus temperature of
the alloy being cast into ingot form. By maintaining the surface temperature above
the alloy liquidus, as the molten metallic material and the solidification front of
the solidifying ingot are much less sensitive to the energy or heat which is applied
by the electron beam guns in maintaining the substantially uniform surface temperature
at temperatures above the liquidus.
[0038] While it is desired that a substantially uniform temperature distribution be maintained
across the surface of the mold pool, it may be necessary to maintain a slightly higher
temperature at the edges of the mold in order to reduce or eliminate the formation
of cold shuts and to minimize or prevent tearing or cracking of the ingot surface
that results when molten metal solidifies on the mold surface at the edge of the molten
metal pool and prevents uniform withdrawal or extraction of the entire ingot during
the casting process. The temperature in the central region of the mold pool is preferably
maintained between zero and 10°C above the alloy liquidus, although it would be possible
to perform the method of the present invention using a mold pool temperature which
is up to 30°C higher than the alloy liquidus, and possibly even higher. The temperature
at the edges of the mold pool is preferably maintained at a temperature no lower than
that of the central region. Any temperature differential between the central region
and the edges of the mold pool will, however, be sufficiently small in order to prevent
excessive fluid convection.
[0039] The imaging radiometer 48 enables both of these important aspects to be achieved,
as the imaging radiometer continuously monitors and produces an image of the entire
mold pool surface, either in gray-tone or pseudocolor, on a monitor. Because the imaging
radiometer detects the radient emission from the alloy in the near-infrared range
(about 700-1100 nanometers), there is no dependence on any visually determinable condition
in measuring the surface temperature and the surface temperature distribution. The
dependence in prior known processes on visual indications monitored by an operator
required the mold pool temperatures employed in the process to generally be below
the alloy liquidus temperature.
[0040] Automatic or manual control of the surface temperature distribution may be employed
in the method of the present invention. In manually controlled EBM furnaces, the operator
edjusts the operating parameters of the electron beam guns 42, 44, primarily modulation
of the beam power and the beam impingement pattern, using the video monitor 66 display
in achieving and maintaining the desired melt pool temperature and substantially uniform
temperature distribution.
[0041] The EBM furnace may alternatively be provided with the capability to automatically
control the electron beam guns 42, 44 by way of computer 70 and real-time sensors
(not shown). In an automatic operating mode, the imaging radiometer sensor system
must have the capability to provide the electron beam control hardware with a signal
related to the detected intensity (temperature) at any selected location in the viewed
scene. This can be accomplished by a system analogous to the signal 72 being supplied
to computer 70 by the video analyzer 64, wherein the information detected by imaging
radiometer 48 is automatically or selectively scanned to obtain the intensity signal
at the location or locations in the viewed scene.
[0042] A nearly isothermal upper metal surface may thus be attained by adjusting the beam
power or intensity and beam impingement pattern in either the manual or automatic
operating modes. In general, some heat input will always be necessary to compensate
for the heat lost from the pool due to radiation. The heat of fusion released at the
ingot solidification front more than compensates for the heat conducted down the ingot.
Meat lost by conduction through the water cooled ingot mold 28 may be compensated
for by shifting the beam distribution toward the edges of the melt pool 40, and as
indicated previously, it may be desired to maintain a slightly higher temperature
at the edges to minimize or prevent the formation of cold shuts and tearing or cracking
of the ingot surface during the withdrawal or extraction of the ingot from the mold.
A further consideration in controlling the surface temperature and distribution is
that when an EBM hearth apparatus is employed, the molten metal pouring into the mold
is generally at a higher temperature than the rest of the pool, and therefore less
beam power will be required in that region.
[0043] In practicing the method of the present invention, the ingots produced have a more
consistent and reproducible internal structure and surface quality. When a nickel-base
alloy is employed in the process, examples of desired metallurgical structures which
may be achieved include an equiaxed dendritic fine grain structure, a columnar dendritic
grain structure, and a structure containing regions having an equiaxed dendritic fine
grain structure and regions containing columnar dendritic grain structure. preferred
metallurgical structures which may be achieved using a titanium-base alloy include
an equiaxed grain structure, a columnar grain structure, and a combination of regions
of equiaxed and columnar grain structures.
[0044] It is to be recognized that other commercial or custom imaging radiometers could
be employed in the apparatus and method of the present invention, provided that they
operate in wavelength regions compatible with EBM processes and are compatible with
sight port materials employed in an apparatus of this type. Commercially available
imaging radiometers employing detectors sensitive to mid-infrared wavelengths in the
range of two to 14 micrometers or portions thereof, while not preferred, could be
employed in the present invention. Sensors employing charge-coupled devices, charge-injection
devices, vidicon and other solid-state or vacuum tube television-like cameras operating
in the visible wavelengths may have sufficient sensitivity to be employed in lieu
of the preferred imaging radiometer described above.
[0045] It is further recognized that the functions performed by the Video Analyzer and Video
Color Quantizer in the imaging radiometer sensor system could also be performed by
a Video Frame Grabber (i.e., video analog to digital converter with internal digital
frame storage capability) and appropriate software operating in a computer dedicated
to video image processing or integrated with the process control computer.
[0046] The foregoing description includes various details and particular features according
to the preferred embodiment of the present invention, however, it is to be understood
that this is for illustrative purposes, only. Various modifications and adaptations
may become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the
spirit and scope of the present invention.
1. Apparatus for casting a molten metallic material in the form of an ingot comprising:
mold means for confining and containing a molten metallic material introduced therein,
said mold means having means for cooling said molten metallic material to solidify
said metallic material to form an ingot, said mold means further having an opening
in a bottom thereof to permit gradual removal of said ingot therefrom;
an imaging radiometer disposed in a predetermined location wherein an upper portion
of said mold means is in a field of view of said imaging radiometer, said imaging
radiometer being capable of measuring a temperature and a temperature distribution
of an upper mold pool surface of said molten metallic material disposed in said upper
portion of mold means;
at least one electron beam gun means for directing a stream of electrons onto said
upper mold pool surface, said electron beam gun means further comprising means for
modulating intensity of said stream of electrons and means for directing said stream
of electrons to preselected regions on said upper mold pool surface;
control means for selectively controlling said modulating of intensity of said
stream of electrons, and for selectively controlling said directing of said stream
of electrons to preselected regions of said upper mold pool surface, said control
means having means for generating signals in response to a difference between said
temperature distribution measured by said imaging radiometer and a predetermined temperature
distribution, and
a vacuum chamber surrounding said mold means and said means for introducing said
molten metallic material into said mold means, said vacuum chamber having at least
a first sight port disposed thereon, said vacuum chamber being adapted to maintain
a predetermined internal pressure suitable for effective operation of said at least
one electron beam gun means.
2. An apparatus as defined in Claim 1 wherein said imaging radiometer produces a video
signal representative of the surface temperature distribution of said upper mold pool
surface, and wherein said control means includes a video analyzer means for receiving
said video signal and producing an image representative of said temperature distribution
on a video monitor.
3. An apparatus as defined in Claim 1 wherein said imaging radiometer is disposed externally
of said vacuum chamber, and said imaging radiometer measures said upper mold pool
surface temperature distribution through said first 5 sight port disposed on said
vacuum chamber.
4. An apparatus as defined in Claim 1 further comprising hearth means disposed for transporting
said molten metallic material to said mold means and introducing said molten metallic
material into said mold means.
5. An apparatus as defined in Claim 1 further including means for periodically calibrating
said imaging radiometer during furnace operation, said means for calibrating comprising
a blackbody radiation reference source.
6. A method for casting a molten metallic material in the form an ingot comprising:
a. transporting said molten metallic material to a mold means for containing said
ingot therein;
b. measuring emissivity indicative of an upper surface mold pool temperature of the
molten metallic material and a temperature distribution of said upper surface mold
pool across an entire surface thereof;
c. Selectively positioning an impingement of a stream of electrons onto said mold
pool surface and simultaneously selectively modulating intensity of said stream of
electrons in order to maintain said measured surface temperature at a predetermined
value, and to maintain said measured surface temperature distribution at a predetermined
surface temperature distribution, in order to produce a preselected metallurgical
structure in said ingot;
d. solidifying said molten metallic material into ingot form by removing heat from
said mold means; and
e. gradually removing said solidified ingot from said mold means.
7. A method as defined in Claim 6 wherein said predetermined value of said surface temperature
is a temperature above a liquidus temperature of said metallic material.
8. A method as defined in Claim 6 wherein said predetermined surface temperature distribution
comprises a substantially uniform temperature across said entire mold pool surface.
9. A method as defined in Claim 6 wherein said predetermined surface temperature distribution
comprises a substantially uniform temperature in a central portion of said mold pool
surface, and a temperature higher than said uniform temperature at an edge of said
mold pool, wherein a temperature difference between said central portion and said
edge of said mold pool is sufficiently small to prevent excessive fluid convection
in said mold pool.
10. A method as defined in anyone of claims 6 to 9 wherein said metallic material is an
alloy selected from the group consisting of: a nickel-base alloy; a titanium-base
alloy; a zirconium-base alloy; a niobium base alloy; a cobalt-base alloy; an iron-base
alloy; and an intermetallic aluminide alloy.