Alstom Kats Gas Jet Process for producing a directionally
solidified casting 1997[1999] US5921310A
Publication
Number: US5921310A
Publication
Date: 1999-07-13
Priority
Number: DE19522266A |
DE19539770A | US1996609832A | US1997938702A
Application
Date: 1997-09-26
Title:
Process for producing a directionally
solidified casting and apparatus for carrying out this process
Inventor
- w/address: Kats Edvard
L.,Moscow,RU | Konter Maxim,Untersiggenthal,CH | Rosler
Joachim,Unterehrendingen,CH | Lubenets Vladimir P.,Miscow,RU
Assignee/Applicant:
ABB Research Ltd.,Zurich,CH
Abstract:
The process serves to produce a directionally solidified
casting (20) and uses an alloy located in a casting mold (12). The casting mold
(12) is guided from a heating chamber (4) into a cooling chamber (5). The
heating chamber (4) is here at a temperature above the liquidus temperature of
the alloy, and the cooling chamber (5) is at a temperature below the solidus
temperature of the alloy. The heating chamber (4) and the cooling chamber (5)
are separated from one another by a baffle (3), aligned transversely to the
guidance direction, having an opening (7) for the casting mold (12). When
carrying out the process, a solidification front (19) is formed, beneath which
the directionally solidified casting (20) is formed. The part of the casting
mold (12) which is guided into the cooling chamber (5) is cooled with a flow of
inert gas. As a result, castings (20) which are practically free of defects are
achieved with high throughput times.
First Claim:
1. A process for
producing a casting in a vacuum chamber, comprising moving a casting mold
containing a liquid alloy from an upper heating chamber into a lower cooling
chamber so as to directionally solidify the liquid alloy and produce a turbine
component having a columnar or monocrystalline microstructure, the heating
chamber being separated from the cooling chamber by a baffle provided with an
opening in close proximity to an exterior surface of the casting mold, the
casting mold below the baffle being additionally cooled externally with flowing
inert gas which is impinging on the already solidified part of the alloy in the
casting mold, the inert gas impinging the casting mold within 40 mm of an
underside of the baffle.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the
Invention
Using processes for
producing a directionally solidified casting, it is possible to produce
components of a complex design which can be subjected to high thermal and
mechanical stresses, such as guide vanes or rotor blades of gas turbines.
Depending on the processing conditions, the directionally solidified casting
can in these cases be designed as a monocrystal or be formed by columnar
crystals which are aligned in a preferred direction. It is of particular
importance that the directional solidification takes place under conditions in
which a high level of heat exchange takes place between a cooled part of a
casting mold which receives molten starting material and the starting material
which is still molten. A zone of directionally solidified material can then
develop, having a solidification front which migrates through the casting mold
under continuing removal of heat, forming the directionally solidified casting.
The production of a
sound casting depends essentially on the magnitude of the temperature gradient
at the solidification front and on the rate of solidification. With a low
temperature gradient and a high rate of solidification, it is not possible to
produce a directionally solidified casting. By contrast, with a high
temperature gradient and a low rate of solidification, it is in fact possible
to produce a directionally solidified casting, but such a casting has unwanted
defects, such as in particular chains of equiaxed grains (freckles).
2. Discussion of
Background
The invention proceeds
from a process for producing a directionally solidified casting and from an
apparatus for carrying out the process as is described, for example, in U.S.
Pat. No. 3,532,155. The process described serves to produce the guide vanes and
rotor blades of gas turbines and using a vacuum furnace. This furnace has two
chambers which are separated from one another by a water-cooled baffle and are
arranged one above the other, the upper chamber of which is designed so that it
can be heated and has a pivotable melting crucible for receiving material to be
cast, for example a nickel base alloy. The lower chamber, which is connected to
this heating chamber by an opening in the water-cooled baffle, is designed so
that it can be cooled and has walls through which water flows. A driving rod
which passes through the bottom of this cooling chamber and through the opening
in the water-cooled baffle bears a cooling plate through which water flows and
which forms the base of a casting mold located in the heating chamber.
When carrying out the
process, first of all an alloy which has been liquefied in the melting crucible
is poured into the casting mold located in the heating chamber. A narrow zone
of directionally solidified alloy is thus formed above the cooling plate forming
the base of the mold. As the casting mold is moved downward into the cooling
chamber, this mold is guided through the opening provided in the water-cooled
baffle. A solidification front which delimits the zone of directionally
solidified alloy migrates from the bottom upward through the entire casting
mold, forming a directionally solidified casting.
At the start of the
solidification process, a high temperature gradient and a high rate of
solidification are achieved, since the material which is poured into the mould
initially strikes the cooling plate directly and the heat which is to be
removed from the melt is led from the solidification front through a
comparatively thin layer of solidified material, with a heat transfer
coefficient α.sub.cm, to the cooling plate. If the material has a
relatively low coefficient of thermal conductivity, as the distance between the
cooling plate and the solidification front increases, heat is increasingly
dissipated through the walls of the casting mold, with a heat transfer
coefficient α. sub.cmd, and also radiated from the mold surface, with a
heat transfer coefficient α.sub.r, into the cooler environment. In
accordance with Newton's law of cooling, the heat q removed from the casting is
then determined as follows:
q=α(T-T.sub.o),
where T is the average
temperature of the casting and T.sub.o is the ambient temperature, as it is
determined, for instance, by the water-cooled walls of the cooling chamber, and
where 1/α=1/α.sub. cm +1/α.sub.cmd +1/α.sub.r.
For a large gas
turbine blade made of a nickel base superalloy, the following values of the
heat transfer coefficients are typically found:
α.sub.cm
=lambda.sub.m /δ.sub.m =816 J/m.sup.2 sK,
α.sub.cmd
=lambda.sub.md /δmd=200 J/m.sup.2 sK,
where lambda.sub.m and
lambda.sub.md are the coefficients of thermal conductivity of the alloy and of
the ceramic casting mold, respectively, and δ.sub.m and δ.sub.md are
the thickness of the layer of metal which has already solidified (taken as 30
mm) between the part of the mold wall situated below the water-cooled wall and
the solidification front and the thickness of the mold wall (taken as 10 mm),
respectively, and α.sub.r =σ(ε.sub.1 T.sub.1.sup.4-ε. sub.
2 T.sub.0.sup.4)/(T.sub.1-T.sub.0)=130 J/m.sup.2 sK, where σ is the
Stefan-Boltzmann constant, ε.sub.1, T.sub.1 and ε.sub. 2, T. sub.0
are the emission capability and temperature of the casting mold surface and the
absorption capability and temperature of the environment, respectively,
(ε.sub.1 =ε .sub.2 =0.5; T.sub. 1 =1500K; T.sub.0 =400K).
This gives α=72
J/m.sup.2 sK.
A further process for
producing a directionally solidified casting is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No.
3,763,926. In this process, a casting mold filled with a molten alloy is
gradually and continuously immersed into a tin bath heated to approximately
260° C. This achieves a particularly rapid removal of heat from the casting
mold. The directionally solidified casting formed by this process is
distinguished by a microstructure which has a low level of inhomogeneities.
When producing gas turbine blades of comparable design, it is possible using
this process to achieve a vales which are almost twice as high as when using
the process according to U.S. Pat. No. 3,532,155. However, in order to avoid
unwanted gas-forming reactions, which can damage the apparatus used in carrying
out this process, this process requires a particularly accurate temperature
control. In addition, the wall thickness of the casting mold has to be made
larger than in the process according to U.S. Pat. No. 3,532,155.
SUMMARY OF THE
INVENTION
Accordingly one object
of the invention is to provide a process of casting directionally solidified
castings, having a low number of defects, and at the same time to provide an
apparatus which is advantageously favorable for carrying out this process.
The process according
to the invention is distinguished by the fact that it provides directionally
solidified castings which are virtually free of defects, are of a low porosity,
and can be designed to be practically free of splinters even with a complex
shape. In addition, the process makes rapid throughput times possible, and can
also be carried out in apparatuses of the prior art, which have been
retrofitted with little expenditure.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF
THE DRAWINGS
A more complete
appreciation of the invention and many of the attendant advantages thereof will
be readily obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the
following detailed description when considered in connection with the
accompanying drawing, wherein the only FIGURE shows in diagrammatic
representation a preferred embodiment of an apparatus for carrying out the
process according to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE
PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to the
drawing, the apparatus shown in the only figure has a vacuum chamber 2 which
can be evacuated by means of a vacuum system 1. The vacuum chamber 2
accommodates two chambers 4, 5 which are separated from one another by a baffle
(radiation shield) 3 and are arranged one above the other, and a pivotable
melting crucible 6 for receiving an alloy, for example a nickel base
superalloy. The upper one 4 of the two chambers is designed so that it can be
heated. The lower chamber 5, which is connected to the heating chamber 4
through an opening 7 in the baffle 3, contains a device for generating and
guiding a stream of gas. This device contains a cavity with orifices or nozzles
8, which point inwardly onto a casting mold 12, as well as a system for
generating gas flows 9. The gas flows emerging from the orifices or nozzles 8
are predominantly centripetally guided. A driving rod 10 passing for example
through the bottom of the cooling chamber 5 bears a cooling plate 11, through
which water may flow if appropriate and which forms the base of a casting mold
12. By means of a drive acting on the driving rod 10, this casting mold can be
guided from the heating chamber 4 through the opening 7 into the cooling
chamber 5.
Above the cooling
plate 11, the casting mold 12 has a thin-walled part 13, for example 10 mm
thick, made of ceramic, which can accommodate nuclei promoting the formation of
crystals and/or a helix initiator. By being lifted off from the cooling plate
11 or being put down on the cooling plate 11, the casting mold 12 can be opened
or closed, respectively. At its upper end, the casting mold 12 is open and can
be filled with molten alloy 15 from the melting crucible 6 by means of a
filling device 14 inserted into the heating chamber 4. Electric heating
elements 16 surrounding the casting mold 12 in the heating chamber 4 keep that
part of the alloy which is located in the part of the casting mold 12 on the
heating chamber side above its liquidus temperature.
The cooling chamber is
connected to the inlet of a vacuum system 17 for removing the inflowing gas
from the vacuum chamber 2 and for cooling and purifying the gas removed.
In order to produce a
directionally solidified casting, first of all the casting mold 12 is brought
into the heating chamber 4 by an upward movement of the driving rod 10 (upward
position shown in dashed lines in the figure). Alloy material which has been
liquefied in the melting crucible 6 is then poured into the casting mold 12 by
means of the filling device 14. A narrow zone of directionally solidified alloy
is thus formed above the cooling plate 11 which forms the base of the mold (not
shown in the figure).
As the casting mold 12
moves downward into the cooling chamber 5, the ceramic part 13 of the casting
mold 12 is successively guided through the opening 7 provided in the baffle 3.
A solidification front 19 which delimits the zone of directionally solidified
alloy migrates from the bottom upward through the entire casting mold, forming
a directionally solidified casting 20 (Figure).
At the start of the
solidification process, a high temperature gradient and a high rate of
solidification are achieved, since the material which is poured into the mold
initially strikes the cooling plate directly and the heat which is to be
removed from the melt is led from the solidification front through a
comparatively thin layer of solidified material to the cooling plate 11. When
the base of the casting mold 12, formed by the cooling plate 11, has penetrated
a few millimeters, for example 5 to 40 mm, measured from the underside of the
baffle 3, into the cooling chamber 5, inert pressurized gas which does not
react with the heated material, for example a noble gas, such as helium or
argon, or another inert fluid is supplied. The inert gas flows emerging from
the orifices or nozzles 8 impinge on the surface of the ceramic part 13 and are
led away downward along the surface. In the process, they remove heat q from
the casting mold 12 and thus also from the already directionally solidified
part of the casting mold content. In accordance with the prior art according to
U.S. Pat. No. 3,532,155, the heat removed is calculated as follows:
q=α(T-T.sub.o)
where T is the
temperature of the casting at the solidification front and T.sub.o is the
ambient temperature, as is determined by the walls of the cooling chamber 5 or
of the vacuum chamber 2, and where 1/. alpha.=1/. alpha..sub.cm
+1/α.sub.cmd +1/α.sub.GCC, where . alpha. .sub. GCC =α.sub.r
(heat transfer by radiation)+α.sub. CVgas (heat transfer by convection).
A particularly high
level of heat removal is achieved even with a casting mold of complex design if
the baffle 3 is cooled and/or if its opening 7 is delimited by flexible fingers
21 which rest against the casting mold 12.
For a large gas
turbine blade made of a nickel base superalloy, the following values of the
heat transfer coefficients are typically found:
α.sub.cm
=lambda.sub.m /δ.sub.m =816 J/m.sup.2 sK,
α.sub.cmd
=lambda.sub.md /δmd=200 J/m.sup.2 sK,
where lambda.sub.m and
lambda.sub.md are the coefficient of thermal conductivity of the alloy and of
the ceramic casting mold 12, respectively, and δ.sub.m and δ.sub.md
are the thickness of the layer of metal which has already solidified (taken as
30 mm) between the mold wall (situated below the baffle 3) and the
solidification front and the thickness of the mold wall (taken as 10 mm),
respectively, and . alpha..sub.GCC =800 J/m.sup.2 sK. With α=134 J/m.sup.2
sK, this gives a heat transfer coefficient which corresponds to that according
to the process of U.S. Pat. No. 3,763,926, which is more difficult to control.
The inert gas blown
into the cooling chamber 5 can be removed from the vacuum chamber 2 by the
vacuum system 17, cooled, filtered and, once it has been compressed to a few
bar, fed to pipelines 18 which are operatively connected to the orifices or
nozzles 8.
A further casting mold
can be filled with molten metal once the casting mold 12 has been removed and
the vacuum chamber 2 evacuated.
The properties of castings
designed as gas turbine blades which have been produced according to the
processes of U.S. Pat. No. 3,532,155, of U. S. Pat. No. 3,763,926 and of the
invention are specified below. These blades each had the same geometrical
dimensions (length 200 mm in each case) and consisted of a nickel base
superalloy with the following main components in percent by weight: (See PDF)
In the processes
according to U.S. Pat. No. 3,532,155 and, in particular, U.S. Pat. No.
3,763,926, the solidification front is typically concave. By contrast, in the
process according to the invention the solidification front is planar or even
convex. Using the process according to the invention, such a monocrystalline
solidification of a turbine blade can be better implemented in the region of
its inner and outer ends.
At a high throughput
rate through the furnace, the process according to the invention is clearly
distinguished by the fact that the castings produced therewith have a
particularly high resistance to monocrystalline structure breakdown, a low
porosity and no defects. Furthermore, when carrying out the process according
to the invention, castings are produced which are virtually free of freckles
and slivers.
Obviously, numerous
modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in the light
of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope
of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as
specifically described herein.
Claims: What is
claimed is:
1. A process for
producing a casting in a vacuum chamber, comprising moving a casting mold
containing a liquid alloy from an upper heating chamber into a lower cooling
chamber so as to directionally solidify the liquid alloy and produce a turbine
component having a columnar or monocrystalline microstructure, the heating
chamber being separated from the cooling chamber by a baffle provided with an
opening in close proximity to an exterior surface of the casting mold, the
casting mold below the baffle being additionally cooled externally with flowing
inert gas which is impinging on the already solidified part of the alloy in the
casting mold, the inert gas impinging the casting mold within 40 mm of an
underside of the baffle.
2. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the gas is a mixture of argon and helium.
3. The process as
claimed in claim 2, wherein the inert gas is flowed into the cooling chamber
after a base of the casting mold has entered the cooling chamber.
4. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the inert gas is flowed in contact with the
exterior surface of the casting mold and is subsequently removed from the
vacuum chamber.
5. The process as
claimed in claim 4, wherein the inert gas is removed from the vacuum chamber by
pumping the inert gas in a direction of movement of the casting mold.
6. The process as
claimed in claim 4, wherein the inert gas is removed from the vacuum chamber by
suction.
7. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the liquid alloy comprises a nickel base superalloy
and the turbine component comprises a turbine blade.
8. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the inert gas comprises argon, helium or mixture
thereof.
9. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the inert gas provides a planar or convex solidification
front in the casting mold.
10. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the turbine component is a monocrystalline turbine
blade or vane.
11. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the alloy is a nickel-base superalloy having a
nominal composition, in weight %, of 6.5% Cr, 9.5% Co. 0.6% Mo, 6.5% W, 6.5%
Ta, 2.9% Re, 5.6% Al, 1% Ti, 0.1% Hf, balance Ni.
12. The process as
claimed in claim 1, wherein the heating chamber includes an electric heating
element adjacent the baffle maintaining the alloy in the casting mold above the
liquidus of the alloy.
13. The process as
claimed in claim 1, further comprising cooling the baffle.
14. An apparatus for
producing a columnar or monocrystalline casting of a turbine component, the
apparatus comprising a vacuum chamber, a casting mold containing a liquid
alloy, a heating chamber in an upper portion of the vacuum chamber, a cooling
chamber in a lower portion of the vacuum chamber, the heating chamber being
separated from the cooling chamber by a baffle provided with an opening, the
opening being in close proximity to an exterior surface of the casting mold,
and gas nozzles below the baffle, the gas nozzles being distributed around the
casting mold and directing an inert gas against a solidified part of the alloy
in the casting mold, the inert gas impinging the casting mold within 40 mm of
an underside of the baffle.
15. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the casting mold is a ceramic casting mold.
16. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 15, wherein the apparatus further includes a water cooled
plate supporting the casting mold.
17. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the nozzles are arranged angularly around the
opening in the baffle, the nozzles being directed predominantly radially
inward.
18. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the apparatus further includes a driving rod which
moves the casting mold from the heating chamber to the cooling chamber.
19. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein an upper end of the casting mold is open.
20. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, further comprising a melting crucible in the heating
chamber.
21. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 20, wherein the baffle includes flexible fingers extending
into the opening and resting against the casting mold.
22. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the cooling chamber is connected to an inlet of a
vacuum system for removing the gas from the cooling chamber.
23. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 22, wherein the nozzles are oriented to flow the inert gas
downwardly along the exterior surface of the casting mold.
24. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the inert gas exiting the nozzles provides a
planar or convex solidification front in the casting mold.
25. The apparatus as
claimed in claim 14, wherein the heating chamber includes an electric heating
element adjacent the baffle, the heating element maintaining the alloy in the
casting mold at a temperature above a liquidus temperature of the alloy.