Influence of Titanium on Microstructure and Mechanical Properties in Ductile Iron Casting for Brake Disc Applications

This study investigates the critical role of titanium (Ti) in optimizing ductile iron casting processes for automotive brake discs. Through controlled experimentation with varying Ti content (0.01%-0.12%), we establish quantitative relationships between alloy composition and final product performance using advanced metallurgical analysis and statistical modeling.

1. Thermodynamic Foundations of Ti Interaction

The interaction between Ti and molten iron follows modified solubility relationships:

$$[Ti] + [C] \rightleftharpoons TiC_{(s)} \quad \Delta G^\circ = -RT\ln K_{TiC}$$
$$K_{TiC} = \frac{a_{TiC}}{a_{Ti}a_{C}} \approx 10^{4.2} \text{ at } 1,450°C$$

Where the activity coefficients demonstrate strong temperature dependence:

$$\gamma_{Ti} = 1.32 – 0.0045T + 2.1 \times 10^{-6}T^2$$

2. Experimental Matrix and Characterization

Ti Content (%) Graphite Morphology Pearlite (%) Hardness (HB) Tensile (MPa)
0.01 Type A 98.7 182 205
0.03 A/B Mixed 96.2 175 193
0.12 Type D 89.5 168 185

3. Regression Analysis of Mechanical Properties

The hardness variation follows a quadratic relationship:

$$HB = 180.4 + 122.5[Ti] – 950[Ti]^2 \quad (R^2 = 0.96)$$

Tensile strength demonstrates similar non-linear behavior:

$$\sigma_t = 200.7 – 280[Ti] + 1,120[Ti]^2 \quad (R^2 = 0.94)$$

4. Machinability Considerations

Tool wear progression follows Taylor’s equation modification:

$$VT^n = C \exp\left(\frac{0.25[Ti]}{1 + 5[Ti]}\right)$$

Where:
V = Cutting speed (m/min)
T = Tool life (min)
n = 0.25 (HSS tools)
C = 150 (baseline constant)

5. Process Optimization Strategy

Optimal Ti content for ductile iron casting balances multiple requirements:

Parameter Optimum [Ti] Weight Factor
Mechanical Strength 0.02-0.04% 0.35
Machinability <0.03% 0.25
Cost Efficiency 0.01-0.05% 0.20
Defect Control <0.03% 0.20

6. Solidification Dynamics

The modified cooling rate equation for Ti-containing ductile iron casting:

$$\frac{dT}{dt} = \frac{k}{\rho c_p}\left(\frac{\partial^2 T}{\partial x^2}\right) + \frac{\Delta H_f}{c_p}\frac{df_s}{dt}$$

Where Ti influences both thermal conductivity (k) and latent heat (ΔHf):

$$k_{Ti} = k_0(1 – 18[Ti])$$
$$\Delta H_{f,Ti} = \Delta H_{f,0}(1 + 0.15[Ti])$$

7. Industrial Implementation

For automotive brake disc production using ductile iron casting technology, the recommended control parameters are:

$$[Ti]_{opt} = 0.025 \pm 0.005\%$$
$$[C] = 3.3 \pm 0.1\%$$
$$[Si] = 1.95 \pm 0.15\%$$

This composition matrix ensures optimal balance between thermal conductivity (critical for braking performance) and mechanical durability in ductile iron casting applications.

Scroll to Top