Carburization defects remain a critical challenge limiting the widespread application of lost foam casting (LFC) in steel castings. This paper systematically reviews mitigation strategies, process optimizations, and practical insights for controlling carbon pickup during LFC of steel components.
1. Fundamental Mechanism of Carburization
The carburization process in LFC steel castings follows the mass transfer equation:
$$
C_w = K_{\Sigma}S(C_E – C_0)\tau \cdot 10^6
$$
Where:
$C_w$ = Final carbon content (%)
$K_{\Sigma}$ = Mass transfer coefficient (s/m²)
$S$ = Contact area between molten steel and pyrolytic products (m²)
$C_E$ = Carbon potential of decomposing foam (%)
$C_0$ = Initial carbon content (%)
$\tau$ = Contact time (s)

2. Classification of Carburization Defects
| Defect Type | Characteristics | Typical Carbon Increase |
|---|---|---|
| Surface Carburization | 0.1-0.3mm surface layer | 0.01-0.10% |
| Bulk Carburization | Uniform carbon distribution | 0.03-0.06% |
| Localized Carburization | Thick-section areas with turbulent flow | Up to 1.3% |
3. Advanced Mitigation Techniques
For steel castings requiring precise carbon control, several innovative methods have demonstrated effectiveness:
3.1 Negative Pressure Combustion Shell Casting
Key process parameters:
$$
P_{\text{vac}} \geq 0.06\text{MPa},\quad T_{\text{ignition}} \geq 800^{\circ}\text{C}
$$
3.2 Oxygen-Enriched Combustion
| O₂ Concentration | Combustion Efficiency | Carbon Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| 25% | 78% | 42% |
| 30% | 92% | 67% |
3.3 Carbon Removal Factor Method
Optimal additive formulation for steel castings:
$$
W_{\text{additive}} = 0.21\rho_{\text{foam}} + 0.05V_{\text{casting}}
$$
Where $\rho_{\text{foam}}$ = foam density (g/L), $V_{\text{casting}}$ = component volume (dm³)
4. Process Optimization Strategies
Through industrial trials with steel castings for waste incineration plants, we developed these practical guidelines:
| Parameter | Optimal Value | Effect on Carburization |
|---|---|---|
| Pouring Temperature | 1560-1580°C | Reduces contact time by 18% |
| Vacuum Level | 0.04-0.05MPa | Improves gas removal by 35% |
| Coating Thickness | 1.2-1.5mm | Reduces surface carburization by 40% |
5. Industrial Implementation Results
Field tests with steel castings (SCH2 chromium steel) showed:
$$
\Delta C_{\text{bottom-gate}} = 0.03-0.06\%,\quad \Delta C_{\text{top-gate}} = 0.35-1.3\%
$$
Key findings for steel casting production:
- Bottom-gating reduces carbon variance by 82%
- Hollow sprue designs decrease carburization by 29%
- Pre-bake treatment (2h@60°C) minimizes gas defects
These advancements enable production of steel castings meeting ASTM A216 WCB specifications with carbon content controlled within ±0.02% of target values.
