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April - June 1998 
 

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Aluminium Components for Automobiles:
Casting Low-Cost, High Quality Parts 
[Abstract] [References]  

Monitoring the Solidification of Metal Castings 
[Abstract] [References]  

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Aluminium Components for Automobiles:
Casting Low-Cost, High-Quality Parts

To meet the needs of today's auto industry, manufacturers have begun producing aluminum components by pouring the metal into molds when it is already partially solidified. The lightweight precision parts produced cost less than those made by forging and machining solids and are stronger and more reliable than those made by conventional casting of liquids. "Semisolid processing" became possible 25 years ago, when an MIT graduate student found that stirring molten metal while it solidifies produces a semisolid that can be cast even when it is solid enough to be handled by robotic equipment. Now the MIT researchers are using industrially important aluminum alloys and new experimental techniques to clarify exactly why the process works and how to make it work better. As expected, the more solid the material is, the shorter the distance it flows before stopping--not good behavior for filling a mold. However, partially solidified samples flow farther if they have been formed by cooling the molten metal slowly and stirring it vigorously. Microstructural analysis shows why. Slow cooling and long stirring produce particles that are large and spherical, while fast cooling and short stirring produce small, jagged particles that tend to stick together. As a result, the larger particles slide by each other more easily than the smaller ones do, producing a semisolid with less resistance to flow. High-speed videos show that the semisolid advances smoothly and evenly, producing parts with a consistent microstructure, smooth finish, high reliability, and constant properties.  
 

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Monitoring the Solidification of Metal Castings

If manufacturers of metals could see exactly how their molten metals solidify, they could control their operations to make their products faster and better. Energy Laboratory researchers have invented a novel way to monitor the solidification process directly without affecting the metal object being formed. They use computed tomography, or CT, the technique used in taking brain scans. A small linear accelerator fires high-energy X-rays along many pathways through a solidifying metal object. How much of the X-ray beam makes it through the object depends on the density it encounters. The solid and liquid forms of a metal differ substantially in density, so a CT image of the object based on the density data shows which areas are solid and which are liquid. This method has yielded minute-to-minute images of an aluminum sample as it solidifies during an hour. The results are consistent with temperature measurements taken within the solidifying sample. The researchers are now developing a new analytical technique that should reduce the scanning time to 1-3 seconds--fast enough for real-time process control in industry. The MIT team is starting to work with important industrial alloys of aluminum and is getting ready for field tests in a commercial casting plant. 
 

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