Abstract

The air gap formation process at the casting/mold interface of a hollow cylinder casting was investigated for alloys solidifying in a mushy type by measuring the displacements of the casting and the mold surfaces during solidification. The formation process of the air gap between the convex casting surface and the outer mold and the heat-transfer coefficient through the gap have been well documented by previous publications. However, the air gap between the concave casting surface and the inner mold, or the core, was found to form differently during mushy solidification, in which the air gap formed during solidification, reached a maximum gap distance, and then decreased due to the contraction of the solidified casting on the expanding inner mold. The gap formation was caused by an inward collapse of the coherent dendrite networks at the concave interface because of low pressure inside of the casting due to solidification shrinkage. The coherent dendrite networks at the convex interface did not collapse inward. The heat-transfer coefficients estimated by measuring the air gap thickness showed a similar tendency to the calculated values obtained by the inverse heat-conduction analysis.

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