Abstract

Despite the well-known importance of controlling shrinkage-induced liquid flow in alloy castings to avoid the formation of catastrophic hot tears during the final stages of solidification, there has been little direct experimental measurement of liquid metal flow and hot tear formation under practical conditions. We use synchrotron X-rays to obtain radiographic video sequences of the solidification of monotectic Al-Pb alloys in which Pb droplets form as a fine-scale emulsion. We track and measure the velocity of thousands of Pb droplets as they move through interdendritic regions due to the effect of liquid to solid shrinkage during the final stages of solidification, up to the point of hot tear formation. Based on the droplet velocities, we present an analysis to estimate the interdendritic liquid velocity as solid fraction increases, and thus the shrinkage pressure drop driving the flow. The analysis is applied for video sequences obtained for both equiaxed and columnar microstructures, each under a range of cooling rates. Our measurements of the critical shrinkage-induced pressure for hot tear formation agree well with prior model-based and theoretical suggestions. The limitations and prospects for droplet tracking measurements of liquid metal flows are discussed.

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