Effect of Mechanical Vibrations In Sand Casting of Aluminium Alloy Using Organic Binders

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Department of Mechanical and Production Engineering, Islamic University of Technology, Gazipur, Bangladesh

Abstract

This paper represents a systematic finite element analysis to evaluate the various mechanical vibration impacts on sand mold casting during aluminum alloy cooling. In general, the mold materials govern the molten metal filling of the cavity in a smooth, uniform, and complete manner. Two distinct types of binding materials were used in this study. As a sand binding material, rubber seed oil and cottonseed oil were utilized. The bottom gating system is adopted because of its low gas entrapment and low surface defect features. Experimentation with several binders at various mechanical vibrations was carried out, as well as computational analysis to determine the best mechanical vibration range for the binders utilized. Following the application of mechanical vibration, the coarser dendrites transformed into fine equiaxed grains, and the size, morphology, and distribution of the -Al primary phase and eutectic silicon particles, as well as the SDAS, were all significantly improved. The mechanical properties and density of A356 aluminum alloy improved significantly as a result, with the tensile strength, yield strength, elongation as well as hardness of the sample with 40 mm wall thickness measured to be 35% higher, 42% higher, 63 percent higher, and 29% higher than those of the conventionally cast sample under the T6 condition. The degree to which mechanical vibration had an effect on the microstructure and mechanical properties of the material increased as the wall thickness increased. Following the application of mechanical vibration, the coarser dendrites transformed into fine equiaxed grains, and the size, morphology, and distribution of the -Al primary phase and eutectic silicon particles, as well as the SDAS, were all significantly improved. The mechanical properties and density of A356 aluminum alloy improved significantly as a result, with the tensile strength, yield strength, elongation as well as hardness of the sample with 40 mm wall thickness measured to be 35% higher, 42% higher, 63 percent higher, and 29% higher than those of the conventionally cast sample under the T6 condition. The degree to which mechanical vibration had an effect on the microstructure and mechanical properties of the material increased as the wall thickness increased. The best binder was chosen based on the rate of cooling at a certain mechanical vibration range. Solid works were used to create a CAD model and a fluid flow study was performed to confirm the impact. The simulation parameters and boundary conditions were taken from an existing model. The actual experimental situation results and CFD modeling both were to demonstrate which binder is the most effective and at what mechanical vibration range does the binder cool more quickly.

Description

Supervised by Prof. Dr. Md. Anayet Ullah Patwari, Head, Department of Mechanical and Production Engineering (MPE), Islamic University of Technology (IUT), Board Bazar, Gazipur-1704, Bangladesh. This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science in Mechanical and Production Engineering, 2022.

Keywords

Casting, Mold, Vibrations, Oils, Organic, Binders

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By