15 research outputs found

    Characterization and simulation of sand ductile iron casting processes

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    L’oggetto principale delle attività di tesi è la caratterizzazione numerico-sperimentale di processi di colata in sabbia di ghisa sferoidale. Inizialmente è stata effettuata un’approfondita indagine bibliografica per comprendere appieno le problematiche relative all’influenza dei parametri del processo fusorio (composizione chimica, trattamento del bagno, velocità di raffreddamento) sulle proprietà microstrutturali e meccaniche di getti ottenuti e per valutare lo stato dell’arte degli strumenti numerici di simulazione delle dinamiche di solidificazione e di previsione delle microstrutture. Sono state definite, realizzate ed impiegate attrezzature sperimentali di colata per la caratterizzazione di leghe rivolte alla misura ed alla differenziazione delle condizioni di processo, in particolare le velocità di raffreddamento, ed atte a validare strumenti di simulazione numerica e modelli previsionali. Inoltre sono stati progettati ed impiegati diversi sistemi per l’acquisizione ed analisi delle temperature all’interno di getti anche di grandi dimensioni. Lo studio, mediante analisi metallografica, di campioni di materiale ottenuto in condizioni differenziate ha confermato l’effetto dei parametri di processo considerati sulle proprietà microstrutturali quali dimensioni dei noduli di grafite e contenuto di ferrite e perlite. In getti di grandi dimensioni si è riscontrata anche una forte influenza dei fenomeni di macrosegregazione e convezione della lega su microstrutture e difettologie dei getti. Le attività si sono concentrate principalmente nella simulazione numerica FEM dei processi fusori studiati e nell’impiego di modelli empirico-analitici per la previsione delle microstrutture. I dati misurati di temperature di processo e di microstrutture sono stati impiegati per la validazione ed ottimizzazione degli strumenti numerici previsionali impiegati su un ampio intervallo di condizioni di processo. L’impiego di strumenti affidabili di simulazione del processo fusorio, attraverso l’implementazione di correlazioni sperimentali microstrutture-proprietà meccaniche, permette la valutazione di proprietà e difettologie dei getti, fornendo un valido aiuto nell’ottimizzazione del prodotto finito e del relativo processo produttivo.This work focuses on a numerical-experimental characterization of casting processes of sand ductile iron. Initially, a deep phase of literary review has been carried out in order to completely understand the effects of the process parameters (alloy chemical composition, melt treatment and cooling rates) on defects, microstructures and mechanical properties of castings and to evaluate the state of the art of the numerical instruments of simulation of solidification dynamics and microstructure prediction. Experimental casting equipments have been designed and developed in order to measure and control the cooling rates and to validate instrument of numerical simulation and microstructure prediction. Moreover, specific methods and instruments have been designed, tested and used in order to measure and analyze temperatures inside the central parts of castings, also in case of heavy sections. Metallographic samples of material, obtained with different conditions, have been studied by means of optical analysis in order to evaluate microstructural features gradient, verifying the effect of the considered process parameters on microstructures parameters such as dimension and distribution of graphite nodules and content of ferrite and pearlite. In heavy section castings, a strong influence of macrosegregation and convective phenomena on microstructures and defects was found. The main part of the activities focused on numerical simulation FEM of the performed casting processes. The measured data of temperatures and microstructures have been used for the validation and optimization of the numerical simulations and of the analytical-empirical models for microstructure prediction in a wide range of process condition. The use of reliable instruments for simulation of casting process, with the adding of the implementation of experimental correlation microstructures-mechanical properties, allows for the evaluation of final properties and defects of castings, giving an important help in the optimization of the final product and its relative production process

    Modeling of microstructure evolution of Ti6Al4V for Additive Manufacturing

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    AM processes are characterized by complex thermal cycles that have a deep influence on the microstructural transformations of the deposited alloy. In this work, a general model for the prediction of microstructure evolution during solid state transformations of Ti6Al4V is presented. Several formulations have been developed and employed for modeling phase transformations in other manufacturing processes and, particularly, in casting. The proposed model is mainly based on the combination and modification of some of these existing formulations, leading to a new overall model specifically dedicated to AM. The accuracy and suitability of the integrated model is enhanced, introducing new dedicated features. In fact the model is designed to deal with fast cooling and re-heating cycles typical of AM processes because: (a) it is able to consider incomplete transformations and varying initial content of phases and (b) it can take into account simultaneous transformations.The model is implemented in COMET, an in-house Finite Element (FE)-based framework for the solution of thermo-mechanical engineering problems. The validation of the microstructural model is performed by comparing the simulation results with the data available in the literature. The sensitivity of the model to the variation of material parameters is also discussed

    A phenomenological model for the solidification of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloys including recalescence and undercooling

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    In this work, a novel phenomenological model is proposed to study the liquid-to-solid phase change of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloy compositions. The objective is to enhance the prediction capabilities of the solidification models based on a-priori definition of the solid fraction as a function of the temperature field. However, the use of models defined at the metallurgical level is avoided to minimize the number of material parameters required. This is of great industrial interest because, on the one hand, the classical models are not able to predict recalescence and undercooling phenomena, and, on the other hand, the complexity as well as the experimental campaign necessary to feed most of the microstructure models available in the literature make their calibration difficult and very dependent on the chemical composition and the treatment of the melt. Contrarily, the proposed model allows for an easy calibration by means of few parameters. These parameters can be easily extracted from the temperature curves recorded at the hot spot of the quick cup test, typically used in the differential thermal analysis (DTA) for the quality control of the melt just before pouring. The accuracy of the numerical results is assessed by matching the temperature curves obtained via DTA of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloys. Moreover, the model is validated in more complex casting experiments where the temperature is measured at different thermocouple locations and the metallurgical features such as grain size and nucleation density are obtained from an exhaustive micrography campaign. The remarkable agreement with the experimental evidence validates the predicting capabilities of the proposed model.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    A Phenomenological Model for the Solidification of Eutectic and Hypoeutectic Alloys Including Recalescence and Undercooling

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    In this work, a novel phenomenological model is proposed to study the liquid-to-solid phase change of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloy compositions. The objective is to enhance the prediction capabilities of the solidification models based on a-priori definition of the solid fraction as a function of the temperature field. However, the use of models defined at the metallurgical level is avoided to minimize the number of material parameters required. This is of great industrial interest because, on the one hand, the classical models are not able to predict recalescence and undercooling phenomena, and, on the other hand, the complexity as well as the experimental campaign necessary to feed most of the microstructure models available in the literature make their calibration difficult and very dependent on the chemical composition and the treatment of the melt. Contrarily, the proposed model allows for an easy calibration by means of few parameters. These parameters can be easily extracted from the temperature curves recorded at the hot spot of the quick cup test, typically used in the differential thermal analysis (DTA) for the quality control of the melt just before pouring. The accuracy of the numerical results is assessed by matching the temperature curves obtained via DTA of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloys. Moreover, the model is validated in more complex casting experiments where the temperature is measured at different thermocouple locations and the metallurgical features such as grain size and nucleation density are obtained from an exhaustive micrography campaign. The remarkable agreement with the experimental evidence validates the predicting capabilities of the proposed model

    Modeling of microstructure evolution of Ti6Al4V for additive manufacturing

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    AM processes are characterized by complex thermal cycles that have a deep influence on the microstructural transformations of the deposited alloy. In this work, a general model for the prediction of microstructure evolution during solid state transformations of Ti6Al4V is presented. Several formulations have been developed and employed for modeling phase transformations in other manufacturing processes and, particularly, in casting. The proposed model is mainly based on the combination and modification of some of these existing formulations, leading to a new overall model specifically dedicated to AM. The accuracy and suitability of the integrated model is enhanced, introducing new dedicated features. In fact the model is designed to deal with fast cooling and re-heating cycles typical of AM processes because: (a) it is able to consider incomplete transformations and varying initial content of phases and (b) it can take into account simultaneous transformations.The model is implemented in COMET, an in-house Finite Element (FE)-based framework for the solution of thermo-mechanical engineering problems. The validation of the microstructural model is performed by comparing the simulation results with the data available in the literature. The sensitivity of the model to the variation of material parameters is also discussed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Numerical modelling of heat transfer and experimental validation in Powder-Bed Fusion with the Virtual Domain Approximation

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    Among metal additive manufacturing technologies, powder-bed fusion features very thin layers and rapid solidification rates, leading to long build jobs and a highly localized process. Many efforts are being devoted to accelerate simulation times for practical industrial applications. The new approach suggested here, the virtual domain approximation, is a physics-based rationale for spatial reduction of the domain in the thermal finite-element analysis at the part scale. Computational experiments address, among others, validation against a large physical experiment of 17.5 [cm3]\mathrm{[cm^3]} of deposited volume in 647 layers. For fast and automatic parameter estimation at such level of complexity, a high-performance computing framework is employed. It couples FEMPAR-AM, a specialized parallel finite-element software, with Dakota, for the parametric exploration. Compared to previous state-of-the-art, this formulation provides higher accuracy at the same computational cost. This sets the path to a fully virtualized model, considering an upwards-moving domain covering the last printed layers

    Numerical modelling and experimental validation in Selective Laser Melting

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    In this work a finite-element framework for the numerical simulation of the heat transfer analysis of additive manufacturing processes by powder-bed technologies, such as Selective Laser Melting, is presented. These kind of technologies allow for a layer-by-layer metal deposition process to cost-effectively create, directly from a CAD model, complex functional parts such as turbine blades, fuel injectors, heat exchangers, medical implants, among others. The numerical model proposed accounts for different heat dissipation mechanisms through the surrounding environment and is supplemented by a finite-element activation strategy, based on the born-dead elements technique, to follow the growth of the geometry driven by the metal deposition process, in such a way that the same scanning pattern sent to the numerical control system of the AM machine is used. An experimental campaign has been carried out at the Monash Centre for Additive Manufacturing using an EOSINT-M280 machine where it was possible to fabricate different benchmark geometries, as well as to record the temperature measurements at different thermocouple locations. The experiment consisted in the simultaneous printing of two walls with a total deposition volume of 107 cm3 in 992 layers and about 33,500 s build time. A large number of numerical simulations have been carried out to calibrate the thermal FE framework in terms of the thermophysical properties of both solid and powder materials and suitable boundary conditions. Furthermore, the large size of the experiment motivated the investigation of two different model reduction strategies: exclusion of the powder-bed from the computational domain and simplified scanning strategies. All these methods are analysed in terms of accuracy, computational effort and suitable application

    Modeling of microstructure evolution of Ti6Al4V for additive manufacturing

    No full text
    AM processes are characterized by complex thermal cycles that have a deep influence on the microstructural transformations of the deposited alloy. In this work, a general model for the prediction of microstructure evolution during solid state transformations of Ti6Al4V is presented. Several formulations have been developed and employed for modeling phase transformations in other manufacturing processes and, particularly, in casting. The proposed model is mainly based on the combination and modification of some of these existing formulations, leading to a new overall model specifically dedicated to AM. The accuracy and suitability of the integrated model is enhanced, introducing new dedicated features. In fact the model is designed to deal with fast cooling and re-heating cycles typical of AM processes because: (a) it is able to consider incomplete transformations and varying initial content of phases and (b) it can take into account simultaneous transformations.The model is implemented in COMET, an in-house Finite Element (FE)-based framework for the solution of thermo-mechanical engineering problems. The validation of the microstructural model is performed by comparing the simulation results with the data available in the literature. The sensitivity of the model to the variation of material parameters is also discussed.Peer Reviewe

    A phenomenological model for the solidification of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloys including recalescence and undercooling

    No full text
    In this work, a novel phenomenological model is proposed to study the liquid-to-solid phase change of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloy compositions. The objective is to enhance the prediction capabilities of the solidification models based on a-priori definition of the solid fraction as a function of the temperature field. However, the use of models defined at the metallurgical level is avoided to minimize the number of material parameters required. This is of great industrial interest because, on the one hand, the classical models are not able to predict recalescence and undercooling phenomena, and, on the other hand, the complexity as well as the experimental campaign necessary to feed most of the microstructure models available in the literature make their calibration difficult and very dependent on the chemical composition and the treatment of the melt. Contrarily, the proposed model allows for an easy calibration by means of few parameters. These parameters can be easily extracted from the temperature curves recorded at the hot spot of the quick cup test, typically used in the differential thermal analysis (DTA) for the quality control of the melt just before pouring. The accuracy of the numerical results is assessed by matching the temperature curves obtained via DTA of eutectic and hypoeutectic alloys. Moreover, the model is validated in more complex casting experiments where the temperature is measured at different thermocouple locations and the metallurgical features such as grain size and nucleation density are obtained from an exhaustive micrography campaign. The remarkable agreement with the experimental evidence validates the predicting capabilities of the proposed model.Peer Reviewe

    An innovative test for non-invasive Kell genotyping on circulating fetal DNA by means of the allelic discrimination of K1 and K2 antigens

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    Objective: The aim of this study was to present a new method for fetal Kell genotyping by means of the allelic discrimination of K1 and K2 in real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Methods: Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction incorporating an allele-specific primer was developed for detecting the K allele of KEL. Results: By means of this method, the K1/K2 genotype was able to be determined in all blood samples analyzed. Results using cell-free fetal DNA (cffDNA) from two Kell-negative pregnant women confirmed the Kell-positive genotype of fetuses. The real-time PCR analysis also allowed the determination of the fetal fraction using the quantification of Kell-positive DNA. Conclusion: An efficient and reliable strategy for Kell genotyping is herein presented. The method was optimized on cffDNA to create a non-invasive prenatal test which could be routinely used for the prevention of hemolytic disease of the fetus and the newborn (HDFN)
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