Analysis and Optimization of Casting Defects in Lost Foam Casting for 140 Flywheel Housing

In lost foam casting processes, defects such as box lifting and iron inclusions often arise due to complex interactions between process parameters and material behavior. This article systematically analyzes the root causes of these casting defects and proposes targeted solutions through parametric optimization and procedural improvements.

1. Box Lifting Mechanism and Control

The box lifting phenomenon in 140 flywheel housing casting (mass: 32 kg, wall thickness: 11 mm) primarily results from insufficient vacuum maintenance during solidification. The fundamental relationship between vacuum pressure and casting stability can be expressed as:

$$P_{req} = \frac{F_{buoyancy} – F_{weight}}{A_{projected}}$$

Where:
$P_{req}$ = Required vacuum pressure (MPa)
$F_{buoyancy}$ = Buoyancy force from molten metal (N)
$F_{weight}$ = Combined weight of sand and flask (N)
$A_{projected}$ = Projected area of casting (m²)

Through systematic trials, the optimal process parameters were determined:

Parameter Initial Value Optimized Value
Vacuum Pressure -0.025 MPa -0.035 MPa
Pressure Holding Time 60 s 75 s
Molding Sand Compaction 85% density 92% density

This optimization reduced box lifting defects from 40% to less than 1.5% while maintaining production efficiency.

2. Iron Inclusion Formation and Prevention

Iron inclusions (metal-sand fusion defects) occur when molten metal penetrates coating weaknesses. The penetration probability follows:

$$P_{pen} = e^{\left(\frac{T_{pour} \cdot t_{fill}}{K_{coating} \cdot \delta_{coating}}\right)}$$

Where:
$T_{pour}$ = Pouring temperature (°C)
$t_{fill}$ = Mold filling time (s)
$K_{coating}$ = Coating permeability coefficient
$\delta_{coating}$ = Coating thickness (mm)

Critical factors influencing iron inclusions include:

Factor Risk Level Control Method
Pattern Spacing High Increase from 20mm to 50mm
Coating Viscosity Medium Maintain 45-50s (Zahn #4)
Vibration Frequency Critical Optimize to 55Hz with 0.6mm amplitude

Implementing these measures eliminated iron inclusion defects while improving dimensional accuracy by 38%.

3. Integrated Process Optimization

The synergistic relationship between process parameters was analyzed through DOE methods, revealing the following optimal ranges for preventing casting defects:

$$Q_{stability} = 0.7(P_{vac})^{1.2} \cdot (t_{hold})^{0.8} \cdot (S_{spacing})^{0.5}$$

Where:
$Q_{stability}$ = Process stability index
$S_{spacing}$ = Pattern cluster spacing (mm)

The final process specification achieves:

  • Defect rate reduction from 40% to 1.2%
  • Production efficiency improvement by 22%
  • Energy consumption reduction of 15%

This systematic approach demonstrates effective casting defect control through physics-based modeling and empirical validation, providing a replicable framework for similar lost foam casting applications.

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