Abstract

A two-phase columnar solidification model is used to study the principle of mechanical soft reduction (MSR) for the reduction of centerline segregation in slab casting. The two phases treated in the model are the bulk/interdendritic melt and the columnar dendrite trunk. The morphology of the columnar dendrite trunk is simplified as stepwise growing cylinders, with growth kinetics governed by the solute diffusion in the interdendritic melt around the growing cylindrical columnar trunk. The solidifying strand shell moves with a predefined velocity and the shell deforms as a result of bulging and MSR. The motion and deformation of the columnar trunks in response to bulging and MSR is modeled following the work of Miyazawa and Schwerdtfeger from the 1980s. Melt flow, driven by feeding of solidification shrinkage and by deformation of the strand shell and columnar trunks, as well as the induced macrosegregation are solved in the Eulerian frame of reference. A benchmark slab casting (9-m long, 0.215-m thick) of plain carbon steel is simulated. The MSR parameters influencing the centerline segregation are studied to gain a better understanding of the MSR process. Two mechanisms in MSR modify the centerline segregation in a slab casting: one establishes a favorable interdendritic flow field, whereas the other creates a non-divergence-free deformation of the solid dendritic skeleton in the mushy region. The MSR efficiency depends not only on the reduction amount in the slab thickness direction but also strongly on the deformation behavior in the longitudinal (casting) direction. With enhanced computation power the current model can be applied for a parameter study on the MSR efficiency of realistic continuous casting processes.

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