Casting Defect Analysis and Optimization Design for a Sand-Casting Lifting Box

This study focuses on addressing casting defects in a ZG25CrNiMo alloy lifting box through systematic process optimization. The component, measuring 1,040 mm × 760 mm × 933 mm with wall thickness ranging from 45 mm to 187 mm, presented significant solidification challenges due to its structural complexity and demanding service requirements in petroleum machinery applications.

1. Component Analysis

1.1 Structural Characteristics

The box features asymmetric geometry with thicker sections (187 mm) at the mounting flange transitioning to thinner walls (45 mm) at the load-bearing surfaces. Thermal analysis identified three critical heat accumulation zones requiring special attention during solidification control.

1.2 Material Properties

The ZG25CrNiMo alloy composition was optimized for fatigue resistance and impact toughness:

Element Content (wt.%)
C 0.22–0.30
Cr 0.60–0.90
Ni 0.60–1.10
Mo 0.35–0.50
Mn 0.70–1.00
Si 0.30–0.60
Fe Bal.

2. Gating System Design

Two gating configurations were evaluated to minimize casting defects:

2.1 Top Gating System

Utilized ceramic tubes with calculated cross-sections:

$$
\Sigma A_{\text{runner}} = 39.2\ \text{cm}^2,\ \ \Sigma A_{\text{ingate}} = 43.1\ \text{cm}^2
$$

2.2 Bottom Gating System

Combined ceramic sprue with sand-formed runners:

$$
\Sigma A_{\text{spure}} = 19.6\ \text{cm}^2,\ \ \Sigma A_{\text{ingate}} = 43.1\ \text{cm}^2
$$

3. Numerical Simulation

ProCAST analysis revealed critical differences in defect formation:

Parameter Top Gating Bottom Gating
Filling Time 39 s 40 s
Shrinkage Volume 2.8% 3.1%
Surface Defects 12 locations 8 locations

The bottom gating system demonstrated superior metal flow stability despite slightly higher shrinkage tendency, particularly in controlling casting defects at critical load-bearing sections.

4. Process Optimization

4.1 First-Stage Optimization

Implemented exothermic riser system using modulus calculations:

$$
M_C = \frac{V}{A} = 5.8\ \text{cm},\ \ M_R = 1.2M_C = 7.0\ \text{cm}
$$

Designed riser dimensions: Ø300 mm × 300 mm with 21.2 dm³ volume, achieving 14.1 dm³ effective feeding capacity.

4.2 Second-Stage Optimization

Strategic chill placement addressed residual shrinkage defects:

Location Chill Type Dimensions (mm)
Lower Flange Formed Chill 150 × 75 × 40
Bearing Surface Curved Chill Ø120 × 35

Cooling efficiency enhancement:

$$
Q_{\text{removed}} = kA\frac{\Delta T}{d} \approx 15.8\ \text{kJ/cm}^3
$$

5. Defect Reduction Results

Final process validation showed remarkable casting defect reduction:

Defect Type Initial Optimized Reduction
Macroshrinkage 3.2% 0.4% 87.5%
Microporosity 12/cm² 2/cm² 83.3%
Surface Defects 8 locations 0 100%

The optimized process achieved directional solidification with progressive cooling from lower sections to the exothermic riser, effectively eliminating casting defects in critical areas while maintaining production efficiency.

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