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Characterization of heat transfer and its effect on solidification in water cooled LPDC of wheels
Author(s) -
A. R. Saadah,
Carl Reilly,
Daan M. Maijer,
SL Cockcroft
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/529/1/012052
Subject(s) - heat transfer , casting , die casting , mechanical engineering , materials science , boiling heat transfer , heat transfer coefficient , automotive industry , die (integrated circuit) , boiling , transient (computer programming) , process (computing) , water cooling , thermodynamics , mechanics , computer science , critical heat flux , metallurgy , engineering , physics , operating system
Computational process modelling has become an important engineering tool in the casting industry to predict the solidification sequence in complex castings. Used properly, this tool can help reduce manufacturing costs. One of the challenging issues in developing casting simulations of the low pressure die casting (LPDC) process for automotive wheels is to quantify the heat transfer coefficients (HTC) within the cooling channels in a die. When water is used as the cooling media, the HTCs exhibit a complex, non-linear behaviour due to the boiling phenomena that occur making it possible to extract a significant amount of heat from the die in a short period of time and influence the solidification of a wheel. Primarily, constant heat transfer coefficients have been used to describe this heat transfer in casting models up until now, but an opportunity exists to improve the transient description of heat transfer in channels cooled with water. In this paper, HTC’s in a lab-scale physical analogue model of die cooling will be characterized as a function of initial die temperatures.

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