Casting Shrinkage Defects
Casting Shrinkage Defects
The metal alloys shrink as they solidify in the mold cavity of the pouring step. It is a normal
phenomenon in casting because the molten metal is less dense than the solid sort.
In the foundry, the shrinkage requires good calculation in the pattern and molding design.
Shrinkage defect is one of the most severe sand casting defects that lower the casting quality.
Here casting shrinkage defects happen as the shrinking process occurs unevenly resulting in
shrinkage cavities in the casting parts. Two types of shrinkage casting defects are close
shrinkage defects and open shrinkage defects.
The open shrinkage defects can be detected in the casting surface by eyes, whereas, the close
shrinkage (shrinkage porosity) defects are inside the casting.
Close shrinkage defects, also known as shrinkage porosity, are cavities (holes) detected within
the casting that is formed where a part of molten metal hotter than other material fluid. They
come in micro-porosity or macro-porosity phase that can weaken the casting as well as
worsening the corrosion-proof property.
Macro shrinkage porosity is a large cavity featured by rough and spongy surface, whereas,
micro shrinkage porosity looks alike jagged marks or lines. Macro shrinkage porosity can be
seen by naked eyes, while micro shrinkage defects are found by microscope.
The shrinkage defects occur mainly due to the solidification of molten fluid is uneven or
uncontrolled.
It stems mostly from improperly pouring structures and technical work as the following:
The casting shrinkage phenomenon is an unavoidable, however we can reduce this metal
casting defects by geometric and process modifications.
Below are factors you can intervene to enhance the final casting quality:
o Design a proper gating system to ensure the continuous flow of molten metal
The design of the gating system must ensure the criteria (1) Control the metal flow rate, not be
impacted, not be swirled, not splashed, must be smooth and constant; (2) Fills the mold cavity
quickly without losing metal dilution; (3) Controlling the temperature in the mold cavity to cool
the metal stably.
o Design a proper feeder (also as known as a riser) system to compensate for the
solidification contraction and minimize the shrinkage cavity formation
The riser is a molten metal storage cavity used to supply molten fluid to the mold cavity to
compensate for shrinkage during metal solidification.
(1): must contain enough molten fluid volume to compensate for the solidification contraction.
(2): must place in the final solidification position of the casting, later solidification than the
casting and is in the liquid state for the longest
Vf ≈ αVc
In which:
α is shrinkage fraction
Vc is cavity volume
Gas porosity
Gas porosity is another popular sand casting defect mostly seen in the metal casting process.
Gas porosity is bubbles created within the casting after the cooling step. Gas porosity casting
problems come in three types of bubbles that are pinholes, blowholes, and open holes.
These casting problems occur because there is an amount of gas (nitrogen, oxygen, or
hydrogen) contained in liquid metal but not in solid metal. Hence, when the fluid is cool down,
this amount of dissolve gas forms bubbles that lower the strength, ductility, and aesthetic of
the casting products.
These bubbles present as porosity or pore either on the surface or inside the casting. The pore
can vary from 0.01 to 0.05mm for a few kg of casting, whereas, the pore of larger weight
casting can be 0.04mm in diameter.
Pinholes
Pinholes, also called as porosities, are tiny bubbles mostly gathered in the upper surface of
casting parts. It usually sizes about 2mm and can be detected by naked eyes without
professional inspection equipment.
Blow hole
Blowholes, as known as blows, are larger cavities than pinholes that usually appear inside the
casting parts. It is invisible to the naked eyes.
To detect the interior casting quality, x-ray, harmonic, ultrasonic, or magnetic analysis are
applied to scan blowholes. Blowholes also can be found in the machining steps.
Open hole
The open hole is similar to large cavities as blowholes but it appears on the surface of casting
parts that visible to naked eyes.
Gas over-absorption mostly occurs by too much moisture and badly vent set up. Specifically,
reasons can be listed as follows:
Proper practices of casting foundry can minimize the gas porosity and ensure the casting
quality. By these following works, it can reduce gas trapped in the metal and avoid cavity
formations:
o Control the adequate moisture content in the sand mold and ensure molding sand is
dry and permeable
Notice that the sand which is too fine can weaken the sand mold gas permeability. It is
recommendable to use coarser sand for better gas permeability.
Also, do not excessively rammed the sand mold because it can lower sand mold permeability
too. Create more vents in the sand mold by vent rods for better permeable. Additionally, the
mold requires to be dried in a standard drying manner.
o Molds and core are required to be dried and stored in a standard drying condition
o Ensure to design enough vents for sand mold and cores to allow gases to get out.
o Use un-rust, clean chills, and dry tools
o Apply properly melting and pouring processes
To minimize the gas porosity casting problems, it is highly recommended to melt metal material
in a vacuum surrounding by a low-solubility gases environment or under the flux that prevents
air contact with the molten metal. Also, pouring molten fluid at a lower temperature to
increase the solidification rate and reduce gas absorption.
Moreover, the turbulence in metal pouring can introduce gases hence it requires a proper
gating system design to prevent metal turbulence during pouring.
This casting problems category into four types that are cold shut, misruns, and slag inclusion.
These sand casting defects weaken the strength of the casting that is able to break the casting.
These sand casting defects occur as the molten metal is poured into the mold cavity from two
pouring points, but the two flows of molten fluid don’t fuse properly.
The main reason causes cold shut casting defect is the lack of molten metal fluidity. Here are
solutions to enhance the fluidity of the metal liquid:
Misruns are casting defects in which the mold cavity is not filled completely with molten metal
resulting unfilled portions or missing parts.
This happens because the metal fluid becomes freezing before filling the entire mold cavity.
The reason leads to misruns casting defects are similar to cold shut that is lack of molten metal
fluidity.
Similar to cold shut remedies, if your casting faces misruns phenomenon, do check
o Gating design
o Sand molding design
o Pouring temperature
Slag Inclusion
Slag inclusion is dark gray clusters or single distribution found in either surface or inside the
casting.
o The raw material and melting input contain impurities (oxides, nitrides, carbides,
sulfides, etc.)
o The improper pouring system design leads to slags are drawn into the mold cavity
during the pouring process
o Material that is eroded from melting furnace, pouring cup.
o Contaminates that contain sand mold
o Slag is not removed and cleaned after the refining step, plus alloy liquid is excessively
stirred under high temperature causing reoxidation
How to treat slag inclusion?
There are several ways to minimize the concentration of slag inclusion. To prevent the slag
inclusion from forming in the casting, you can check these remedies:
o Qualify the metal melting process to ensure the pure alloy liquid obtained
To prevent oxide formation in the metal, it is recommended to melt metal in a vacuum, flux,
inert atmosphere.
If you melt metal in a normal furnace, make sure it is well control of input material, additives,
and melting temperature. Remove all the slag formation in the furnace during melting.
There a different mold material defects, here we list down the main defects commonly seen in
the casting process.
To prevent cuts and washes defects, you can try to adjust these things:
Metal penetration is the casting defects that metal penetrates sand grain gaps resulting in a
rough and uneven casting surface. These sand casting defects are visible to naked eyes and
lower casting aesthetic.
Fusion is sand casting defects in which sand grain fuses with metal flow resulting in a thin crust
with a glassy and brittle look attached to the casting.
Runout is sand casting defects that molten metal escape out of the mold resulting mold cavity is
not entirely filled and missing/incomplete parts are created.
Swells cause enlargement of casting compared to the desired volume that requires further
machining later and metal wastage.
Hot tears/cracks
Hot tears, as known as hot crack, are sand casting defects that appears as irregular crevices in
the casting. Some cracks are visible to naked eyes, some need magnification to detect.
These cracks are created because the metal is weak when it is hot, and residual stresses
(tensile) in the metal can cause problems as it solidifies. If solidified metal doesn’t have enough
strength to resist the residual stresses, the hot cracks will present.
Hot spots, also called hard spots, happen when a casting area is cool quicker than other
surrounding areas resulting in hard spots than others.
Specifically to one of the most favorite and popular in casting foundry that is sand casting. It can
not negate that sand casting is exceptional by its ability to cast large volume, high detailed and
low molding cost of casting parts. However, it is vital to look at possible sand casting defects to
estimate the tolerance and expectation to customer.
At VIC casting foundry, we are transparently to discuss with our customers possible casting
defects that could happen during the working process. We always try to limit as much as
possible to minimize sand casting defects and supply the best quality casting parts.
Our approach to sand casting defects varies from different defects. However, our working
motto is always prevention is better than cure. Therefore, we apply strictly inspection
processes for all of the manufacturing processes, from raw material input, melting metal,
pouring system, cooling, to machining work.
At VIC foundry, we have equipped with SpetroMax machines to analyze input material
composition. Before every melting segment, the raw material is well controlled of its quality to
reduce the metallurgical defects. In this way, we can limit the casting defects in the first place.
At the same time, we continuously control the gating system and pouring process to ensure its
effectiveness and properness in accordance with each casting requirement. All the mechanical
processes are under the supervision manager to ensure proper technique.
After the casting cools, all of the roughcasting must go through the filtering process to sort out
qualified and unqualified objects. Any under-required casting continuously is moved to
machining steps. The casting will be rejected if they are impossible to repair.
By this way, we can guarantee to commit that whatever casting we offer to the customer, it is
of high quality.