Title: Overview of Modeling
1Casting Process Modeling Using SOLIDCast
2What is SOLIDCast?
- SOLIDCast is the worlds best-selling casting
process modeling software from Finite Solutions,
Inc. This package, formerly sold as AFSolid 2000,
is now in use in more than 400 companies and
schools in over 40 countries around the world. - SOLIDCast is a PC-based software tool that
simulates the pouring of hot metal of virtually
any casting alloy into sand, shell, investment or
permanent molds, and the subsequent
solidification and cooling process.
3What makes SOLIDCast Work?
- SOLIDCast uses the Finite Difference Method(FDM)
of heat transfer calculation, combined with a
unique tracking of volumetric changes in the
metal, to predict the temperature and volume
changes in a casting as it is poured, solidified
and cooled. - This combined thermal-volumetric approach has
proven to be an extremely accurate method of
predicting various casting problems, including
micro- and macro-porosity, hot spots and other
defects.
4What is Casting Process Modeling?
- Casting Process Modeling is a mathematical way to
let the computer predict(simulate) what will
happen when a casting is poured on the shop
floor. - Virtually anything that can be modified in the
foundry can be simulated using Casting Process
Modeling. Simulation allows you to fine tune your
casting process in much less time, and without
the waste of expensive materials, than shop floor
trials.
5What are the benefits?
- Shorten Lead Times
- Help Solve Problems
- Optimize Existing Jobs
- Train Employees
- Improve Customer Relations
- Attract More Jobs Through Improved Market Image
6So, how does Casting Process Modeling work?
- Select Materials and Properties
- Build Casting/Mold Model
- Mesh Model/Run Simulation
- Evaluate Results
- Modify and Re-simulate
7Select Materials and Properties
- The first step in modeling is to select the
materials that will be used in the simulation.
This includes the casting alloy, as well as all
mold materials. SOLIDCast contains databases
with over 230 casting alloys in all the major
groups, plus data on all common mold materials. - You can also use chills, insulation, exothermics
and cooling/heating channels in permanent mold
dies.
8Select Materials and Properties
- Properties That Control Heat Flow in a Mold
Material - Thermal Conductivity
- Specific Heat
- Density
- Initial Temperature(s)
9This screen capture of the Mold Tab shows typical
properties for a cast iron chill. All common
molding sands are included, plus insulating and
exothermic materials. You can add, modify or
remove materials at any time.
10Select Materials and Properties
- Casting Alloys Also Require
- Solidification Temperature
- Freezing Range
- Latent Heat of Fusion
- Solidification Curve
- Volumetric Change(Shrinkage) Curve
11The Casting Tab has additional data, since the
casting alloy will change from a liquid to a
solid during the simulation.
12The Solidification and Shrinkage curves define
the freezing behavior for each casting alloy.
These can be modified by the user, and cast iron
curves can be developed based on chemistry and
molding method.
13Select Materials and Properties
- Heat Transfer Coefficients Control Heat Flow
Between Materials - Mold Coatings
- Air Gaps
- Cooling Channels
- Convection/Radiation
14Heat Transfer Coefficients(HTCs) are used to
define how heat flows across surfaces. They are
most often used in permanent mold casting, to
show coating effects, and in investment casting,
to show radiation effects from the hot shell.
15The top pictures show 2 investment casting models
The bottom pictures show the radiation view
factors
16Build Casting/Mold Model
- Once youve created a Materials List, which
tells the system what materials will be used in
your simulation, you need to build the
casting/mold geometry. - This step is the most user-intensive part of the
process, but, as you will see, there are many
time saving ways of building models.
17Model Building Techniques
- Direct import of 3D CAD data
- Import of 2D CAD data gt 3D
- Blueprints
- Digitizing
- Shapes, Drawing, 2D CAD
183D STL File Import
- Most CAD systems have it
- Triangles cover the part surface
- One file for each material(casting, chills,
cores) - Binary smaller than ASCII
19This model of a cylinder head was created using 4
STL files, one for the casting, two for core
assemblies and one for the sleeves.
202D DXF File Import
- Every CAD system has it
- Auto-trace utility can extract cross-sections
- Extrude, rotate or blend sections to create 3D
- Exact data as created by CAD operator
- Drawings may have problems, but can be corrected
21The 2D DXF file shown above became the 3D solid
shown at the right. Sections from the CAD file
were extruded, rotated and blended to create 3D
geometry.
22Working With Blueprints - Digitizing
- Fast input
- Multiple scales are ok
- Hardware is inexpensive
- CAD looks better, but simulation results are the
same
23With a digitizing tablet and a blueprint, you can
trace 2D sections that will be rotated, extruded
or blended into 3D models, such as the investment
cast valve bodies shown at the right.
24Working With Blueprints Shapes, Drawing, 2D CAD
- Requires greatest time and operator effort
- Good for gating/risering systems
- Doesnt require other software
- Works best when all dimensions are listed
25This aluminum permanent mold casting took over a
day to build, using only a blueprint and 2D CAD.
However, the improvements made due to simulation
saved the foundry over 700,000 per year on this
part alone! (Note that the die pieces have been
removed for clarity.)
26Run Simulation
- Once you have the Materials List and the
casting geometry, you can put the two together in
a process called Meshing. The meshed model is a
series of cubes, called nodes. Each node has
different material properties, as defined in your
materials list. - The meshed model is like a big series of Lego
bricks, all of which are shaped like cubes. A
meshed model may have millions of cubes, and the
heat transfer equations are applied to each cube,
over and over.
27This pictures shows a meshed model of casting
plus risers, including insulating and exothermic
sleeves and chills. The number of cubes used in
a mesh is limited only by available memory.
28This picture shows the mold cavity as it is being
meshed. This can be done automatically using
SOLIDCast.
29Temperatures During Filling Sequence
During the mold filling simulation, the relative
temperatures are shown on the screen, so you can
see hot and cold spots develop. Heat is being
lost to the mold and surrounding air.
30Temperatures During Solidification Sequence
After mold filling is complete, you can watch the
progression of solidification. Gray areas show
solidified metal, and temperatures can be seen in
the cooling metal. Notice that volumetric feeding
is calculated at the same time as temperature.
31Interpreting Results
- Once a simulation is complete, you can look at
various pieces of data to decide whether you have
made a good part or a bad one. - Since this decision may be based on different
factors for each casting, SOLIDCast provides
many types of data for your use.
32What Data Can be Plotted?
- Temperature During Fill and Solidification
- Displayed during the simulation, or as a single
time plot - Time
- Liquidus
- Critical Fraction Solid
- 100 Solid
- Local Solidification
- Hot Spots (Isolations)
- Based on CFS
- Based on 100 Solid
33What Data Can be Plotted?
- Temperature Gradient
- Cooling Rate
- Material Density
- Criteria Functions
- Niyama
- FCC (Micro-porosity)
- User Defined Functions
34How Can Data Be Plotted?
- CastPic Plot
- 3D color plot at any orientation
- Cut planes can be active
- Iso-Surface Plot
- Surface at a given value
- Surrounds worse values
- Good for time or density plots
- Cut-Plane Plot
- 2D slice from the 3D model
- Good detail, plus individual data
- CastScan Movies
- Color plot on a transparent casting
- Progressive or rotating
35This CastPic plot show the progression of
Critical Fraction Solid (CFS) Time on a valve
body casting. The casting has been cut in half so
you can see what is happening internally.
Progressive Solidification Critical Fraction
Solid Time Range (CastPic Plot)
36This screen is an iso-surface plot of the FCC
Criterion, used to predict microporosity in
castings. Notice that the tendency towards
shrinkage varies depending on position in the
mold.
37This is a Cut Plane Plot. You can drag the cut
plane through the model, and a 2D plot will be
created instantly. This plot also shows CFS Time,
which shows when feeding ends.
38Movies Animating your plots
- Each of the plot types can also be created in a
movie format. You can control the number of
frames, how fast the movie runs, and the range of
data displayed. - These movies are saved in the Windows standard
AVI format, so you can send copies to your
customers and they can run them on any Windows
PC, without any extra hardware or software. - The next screen shows samples from a movie.
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40Modify Model and Re-simulate
Simulation is an iterative process. Once you have
evaluated results, most often you will find
something that needs improvement. When you do,
you have a number of options available.
Basically, anything that can be changed on the
shop floor can be simulated to a certain extent
using SOLIDCast. For example, you can
- Change Geometry
- Change Process Parameters
- Change Rigging
41The Payback - Casting Examples
- Steel Investment Cast Food Processing Part
- Aluminum Permanent Mold Automotive Part
- Steel Sand Cast Elevator Part
- Cast Iron Sand Cast Compressor Body
42Investment Casting - Steel
- 3 patterns via rapid prototyping
- 2 failures by conventional methods
- 13 simulations in 1 1/2 weeks
- 500,000 per year new business
- saved 26-39 weeks lead time
43The figure on the left is the initial rigged
geometry. The iso-surface plot on the right shows
material density. You can see shrinkage-prone
areas moving from the gating system into the
casting.
44The final model, with a top ring riser, gives
acceptable results. Note that shrinkage was not
completely eliminated in this case, but was
reduced and moved into an acceptable area of the
casting.
45Permanent Mold - Aluminum
- High Volume Brake Component
- 7 Shrinkage Rejects on Machining
- Now lt0.4 Rejects
- 700,000/Year Savings
46With the original gating, the last place to
freeze was in the casting, not the riser. When
this area was bored out, the shrinkage was
exposed and the casting was scrapped.
47By changing the riser shape and increasing the
contact size, the last point to freeze was moved
into the riser, and the casting is now
shrink-free.
48Sand Casting - Steel
- Behind in delivery of new casting
- 9 risers but still had shrinkage
- 12 simulations with feedback
- 10 working days to complete job
- 5-6 yield improvement
- Better quality at a reduced cost
49Without simulation to show the hot spots, this
casting was over-risered, yet still had
unacceptable shrinkage.
50Simulation pointed out where the real problems
lay, allowing an intelligent risering scheme to
be applied, resulting in higher yield AND higher
quality.
51Sand Casting - Cast Iron
- Gray iron compressor body
- High yield, but shrinkage in green sand
- Simulations run for green sand and no-bake
molding systems - No-bake provided good results
52This gray iron compressor body was cast in the
green sand process, but had internal
porosity. By switching to a no-bake process, the
mold was more rigid and shrinkage was eliminated.
53Simulated X-ray results. Green Sand
Mold No-Bake Mold
54The worlds best-selling modeling software The
worlds most cost-effective simulation package