Precision Investment Casting of Thin-Walled DAM Enclosures for Phased Array Radar Systems

Thin-walled Digital Array Module (DAM) enclosures serve as critical components in modern phased array radar systems, where structural complexity and dimensional accuracy directly influence system performance. Traditional manufacturing approaches combining CNC machining and EDM processes face limitations including 90% material waste, 45-day lead times, and 68% higher production costs compared to casting methods. This paper demonstrates how precision investment casting enables the production of aluminum alloy DAM enclosures with 1.5mm wall thickness while achieving CT6 dimensional tolerance and Ra ≤ 3.2μm surface finish.

The thermal management requirements of DAM enclosures necessitate materials with superior heat transfer properties. ZL101A aluminum alloy (AlSi7Mg0.3) was selected based on its optimized combination of castability and thermal performance:

$$k = 151\ \text{W/m$\cdot$K}\ (25^\circ\text{C})$$
$$\sigma_b = 280\ \text{MPa},\ \delta = 3.5\%$$

Element Si Mg Fe Cu Zn Al
Content (%) 6.5-7.5 0.25-0.45 <0.20 <0.10 <0.10 Bal.

Structural optimization through precision investment casting required redesigning thin-wall sections using stiffening strategies:

$$ \Delta \theta = \frac{q”}{k} \cdot \frac{t}{A} $$

Where thermal deflection (Δθ) is minimized by increasing cross-sectional area (A) through 2mm vertical ribs, reducing warpage from 0.8mm to 0.12mm in 1.5mm walls.

Process Implementation

The precision investment casting workflow incorporates advanced pattern making and shell building techniques:

Wax Pattern Parameters
Parameter Value
Injection Temperature 65°C
Pressure Profile 2MPa (fill), 1.8MPa (hold)
Cooling Rate 0.5°C/min

Ceramic shell construction employed a multi-layer system with zircon prime coats and mullite backup layers, achieving 850°C thermal stability:

$$ \text{Shell Thickness} = \sum_{n=1}^{8} (0.15n + 0.2)\ \text{mm} $$

Metallurgical Control

Advanced melt treatment ensured defect-free castings through rotational degassing and eutectic modification:

$$ C_{H} = C_0 \cdot e^{-(D \cdot t)/\delta^2} $$

Where hydrogen content (CH) is reduced below 0.12ml/100g Al using Argon rotary degassing at 0.2MPa for 15 minutes. Strontium modification (0.15% AlSr10) refined silicon morphology:

Microstructure Comparison
Condition Si Length (μm) Aspect Ratio
Unmodified 25-50 8-12
Modified 2-5 1-2

Casting Optimization

Vacuum-assisted countergravity filling with 0.15MPa differential pressure enabled complete mold filling:

$$ v = \sqrt{\frac{2(P_{\text{vac}} + \rho g h)}{\rho}} $$

Where fill velocity (v) reached 1.2m/s, preventing cold shuts in 0.8mm sections. Thermal management during solidification used directional cooling techniques:

Thermal Parameters
Parameter Value
Preheat Temperature 490°C
Pour Temperature 720°C
Solidification Gradient 85°C/cm

Quality Validation

Post-casting evaluation confirmed the capability of precision investment casting to meet DAM requirements:

Mechanical Properties
Property Value Specification
UTS 290 MPa >280 MPa
Elongation 5.5% >3%
Surface Ra 2.8μm <3.2μm

X-ray inspection showed zero porosity defects >0.2mm, while dimensional analysis confirmed CT6 tolerance achievement across 98.7% of features. The success of this precision investment casting implementation demonstrates 40% cost reduction and 60% lead time improvement over conventional machining approaches for complex radar enclosures.

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