Soldering is a unique casting defect associated with die casting or metal mold casting of aluminum al oys. It occurs when molten aluminum sticks or solders the surface of the die steel and remains there after the ejec...Soldering is a unique casting defect associated with die casting or metal mold casting of aluminum al oys. It occurs when molten aluminum sticks or solders the surface of the die steel and remains there after the ejection of the casting, causing a surface defect and dimensional inaccuracy of the castings and increased machine downtime. Soldering occurs easily when a bare die steel mold is used for die casting of aluminum al oys. When molten aluminum comes in contact with the die steel at a temperature higher than a critical temperature, the iron and aluminum atoms diffuse into each other, forming a series of intermetallic phases and a liquid aluminum-rich fcc phase. This liquid phase exists between intermetal ic phases. On cooling, the liquid fcc phase solidiifes on the intermetal ic phases and grows into the casting, resulting in soldering. The critical temperature is the eutectic temperature near the aluminum corner of the phase diagram. If the die is protected using a nonreactive ceramic coating, soldering starts at locations where local coating failure occurs. Molten aluminum comes into contact with die steel through the coating failure locations and eats into the steel matrix, forming smal pits. As these smal pits grow, the coating is gradual y removed and soldering becomes more severe. Details of die soldering step on a bare steel die and on a coated die material are discussed.展开更多
基金sponsored by the North American Diecasting Association (NADCA) and the U.S.Department of Energy,Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy,Office of Transportation Technologies,Lightweight Vehicle Materials Program,under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 with UT-Battele,LLC
文摘Soldering is a unique casting defect associated with die casting or metal mold casting of aluminum al oys. It occurs when molten aluminum sticks or solders the surface of the die steel and remains there after the ejection of the casting, causing a surface defect and dimensional inaccuracy of the castings and increased machine downtime. Soldering occurs easily when a bare die steel mold is used for die casting of aluminum al oys. When molten aluminum comes in contact with the die steel at a temperature higher than a critical temperature, the iron and aluminum atoms diffuse into each other, forming a series of intermetallic phases and a liquid aluminum-rich fcc phase. This liquid phase exists between intermetal ic phases. On cooling, the liquid fcc phase solidiifes on the intermetal ic phases and grows into the casting, resulting in soldering. The critical temperature is the eutectic temperature near the aluminum corner of the phase diagram. If the die is protected using a nonreactive ceramic coating, soldering starts at locations where local coating failure occurs. Molten aluminum comes into contact with die steel through the coating failure locations and eats into the steel matrix, forming smal pits. As these smal pits grow, the coating is gradual y removed and soldering becomes more severe. Details of die soldering step on a bare steel die and on a coated die material are discussed.