Prevention of Shrinkage Defects in Brake Drum Castings Through Solidification Control

In gray iron casting production, shrinkage porosity remains one of the most persistent casting defects, particularly in rotational components like brake drums. This article presents a systematic approach to resolving shrinkage defects through optimized solidification control, supported by thermodynamic modeling and production validation.

1. Problem Characterization

The investigated brake drum casting (6 kg mass) exhibited 100% defect rate at mounting surface roots after machining. Key dimensional characteristics include:

Feature Dimension (mm)
Primary wall thickness 14.7
Maximum section thickness 27.1
Minimum section thickness 6.0
Critical transition radius 4.4

X-ray analysis revealed dendritic structures in defect zones, confirming shrinkage porosity formation. The characteristic shrinkage defect pattern follows the thermal gradient equation:

$$ \nabla T = \frac{\partial T}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial T}{\partial y} + \frac{\partial T}{\partial z} $$

2. Process Analysis

Original process parameters:

Parameter Value
Pouring temperature 1,360-1,460°C
Gating ratio (ΣFsprue:ΣFrunner:ΣFgate) 0.9:1.2:1
Mold type Green sand (FCMX system)
Riser height differential 4 mm

The inadequate feeding distance (Lf) from side riser to critical section followed:

$$ L_f = 4.5 \times \sqrt{t_{solid}} $$

Where tsolid represents solidification time of the thickest section.

3. Thermodynamic Modeling

Using Chvorinov’s rule for solidification time comparison:

$$ t = \left(\frac{V}{A}\right)^n $$

Section Volume (cm³) Surface Area (cm²) Solidification Time Ratio
Thick section (B) 317.4 215.8 1.00
Transition zone 84.3 92.6 0.32

The critical solidification gradient (G) and growth rate (R) relationship:

$$ G \times R = \frac{\alpha}{\beta} $$

Where α represents thermal diffusivity and β material constant.

4. Process Optimization

Modified parameters achieved defect elimination:

Improvement Measure Original Optimized
Gating orientation Bottom Top
Gate velocity (m/s) 0.62 0.43
Gate cross-section (mm²) 256.2 317.2
Yield improvement 75.8% 86.3%

The feeding efficiency (η) improvement followed:

$$ η = \frac{V_{feed}}{V_{shrink}} \times 100\% $$

5. Quality Validation

Production results after optimization:

Batch Quantity Defect Rate Yield
Initial trial 188 100% 89.7%
Process validation 60 0% 92.6%
Mass production 1,304 0.23% 93.1%

The successful resolution demonstrates that systematic analysis of casting defects through solidification control can significantly improve production quality while maintaining cost efficiency.

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