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Cores
Cores
The core is normally a disposable item that is destroyed to get it out of the piece.[1] They are most commonly used in sand casting, but are also used in injection molding. An intriguing example of the use of cores is in the casting of engine blocks. For example, one of the GM V-8 engines requires 5 dry-sand cores for every casting.[1]
Contents
[hide]
3.1 Green-sand cores 3.2 Dry-sand cores 4.1 Lost cores 4.2 Binders 4.3 Other considerations
[edit] Requirements
There are seven requirements for core:[2] 1. In the green condition there must be adequate strength for handling.
2. In the hardened state it must be strong enough to handle the forces of casting; therefore
the compression strength should be 100 to 300 psi (0.69 to 2.1 MPa).
3. Permeability must be very high to allow for the escape of gases. 4. As the casting or molding cools the core must be weak enough to break down as the
casting or molding.
[edit] Types
There are many types of cores available. The selection of the correct type of core depends on production quantity, production rate, required precision, required surface finish, and the type of metal being used. For example, certain metals are sensitive to gases that are given off by certain types of core sands; other metals have too low of a melting point to properly break down the binder for removal during the shakeout.[2]
Green-sand cores Green-sand cores are not a typical type of core in that it is part of the cope and drag, but still form an internal feature. Their major disadvantage is their lack of strength, which makes casting long narrow features difficult or impossible. Even for long features that can be cast it still leave much material to be machined. A typical application is a through hole in a casting.[2]
More complex single-piece cores can be made in a manner similar to injection moldings and die castings.[2]
half core box dump core box split core box left and right core box gang core box strickle core box loose piece core box Ghayoor
[edit] Binders
Special binders are introduced into core sands to add strength. The oldest binder was vegetable oil, however now synthetic oil is used, in conjunction with cereal or clay. The core is then baked in a convection oven between 200 and 250 C (392 and 482 F). The heat causes the binder to cross-link or polymerize. While this process is simple, the dimensional accuracy is low.[3] Another type of binder process is called the hot-box process, which uses a thermoset and catalyst for a binder. The sand with the binder is packed into a core box that is heated to approximately 230 C (446 F) (which is where the name originated from). The binder that touches the hot surface of the core box begins to cure within 10 to 30 seconds. Depending on the type of binder it may require further baking to fully cure.[4] In a similar vein, the cold-box process uses a binder that is hardened through the use of special gases. The binder coated sand is packed into a core box and then sealed so that a curing gas can be introduced. These gases are often toxic (i.e. amine gas) or odorous (i.e. SO2), so special handling systems must be used. However, because high temperatures are not required the core box can be made from metal, wood, or plastic. An added benefit is that hollow core can be formed if the gas is introduced via holes in the core surface which cause only the surface of the core to harden; the remaining sand is then just dumped out to be used again.[4] For example, a cold-box sand casting core binder is sodium silicate which hardens on exposure to carbon dioxide.[5] Special binders are used in air-set sands to produce core at room temperature. These sands do not require a gas catalyst because organic binders and a curing catalyst are mixed together in the sand which initiates the curing process. The only disadvantage with this is that after the catalyst
is mixed in there is a short time to use the sand. A third way to produce room temperature cores is by shell molding.[4] The term no-bake sands can refer to either the cold-box process or air-set process.[4][5]
[edit] Chaplets
Various types of chaplets. As mentioned earlier, cores are usually supported by two core prints in the mold. However, there are situations where a core only uses one core print so other means are required to support the cantilevered end. These are usually supplied in the form of chaplets. These are small metal supports that bridge the gap between the mold surface and the core, but because of this become part of the casting. As such, the chaplets must be of the same or similar material as the metal being cast. Moreover, their design must be optimized because if they are too small they will completely melt and allow the core to move, but if they are too big then their whole surface cannot melt and fuse with the poured metal. Their use should also be minimized because they can cause casting defects or create a weak spot in the casting.[6] It is usually more critical to ensure the upper chaplets are stronger than the lower ones because the core will want to float up in the molten metal.[7]
[edit] Cheeks
A cheek used to create a pulley When casting a reentrant angle instead of using a core a cheek can be used instead. This is a third segment in the flask, in addition to the cope and drag. This allows the entire mold to be made from green sand and from removable patterns. The disadvantage of this is more mold-making operations are required, but it is usually advantageous when the quantities are low. However, if large quantities of casting are required, it is usually more cost effective to simply use a core. Core Sands and Core Binders Green sand cores are made from standard molding-sand mixtures, sometimes strengthened by adding a binder, such as dextrin, which hardens the surface. Cores of this type are very fragile and are usually made with an arbor or wires on the inside to facilitate handling. Their collapsibility is useful to prevent hot tearing of the casting. Dry sand cores are made from silica sand and a binder (usually oil) which hardens under the action of heat. The amount of oil used should be the minimum which will produce the necessary core strength. Core binders are either organic, such as core oil, which are destroyed under heat, or inorganic, which are not destroyed. Organic Binders The main organic binder is core oil. Pure linseed oil is used extensively as one of the basic ingredients in blended-oil core
binders. These consist primarily of linseed oil, resin, and a thinner, such as high-grade kerosene. They have good wetting properties, good workability, and better oxidation characteristics than straight linseed oil. Corn flour produces good green strength and dry strength when used in conjunction with oil. Cores made with this binder are quick drying in the oven and burn out rapidly and completely in the mold. Dextrin produces a hard surface and weak center because of the migration of dextrin and water to the surface. Used with oil, it produces a hard smooth surface but does not produce a green bond as good as that with corn flour. Commercial protein binders, such as gelatin, casein, and glues, improve flowability of the sand, have high binding power, rapid drying, fair resistance to moisture, and low burning-out point, with only a small volume of gas evolved on burning. They are used where high collapsibility of the core is essential. Other binders include paper-mill by-products, which absorb moisture readily, have high dry strength, low green strength, high gas ratio, and high binding power for clay materials. Coal tar pitch and petroleum pitch flow with heat and freeze around the grains on cooling. These compounds have low moisture absorption rates and are used extensively for large iron cores. They can be used effectively with impure sands. Wood and gum rosin, plastic resins, and rosin by-products are used to produce collapsibility in cores. They must be well ground. They tend to cake in hot weather, and large amounts are required to get desired strength. Plastics of the urea- and phenol-formaldehyde groups and furan resins are being used for core binders. They have the advantage of lowtemperature baking, collapse readily, and produce only small amounts of gas. These can be used in dielectric baking ovens or in the shell molding, hot box, or air setting processes for making cores. Inorganic binders include fire clay, southern bentonite, western bentonite, and iron oxide. Cores can also be made by mixing sand with sodium silicate. When this mixture is in the core box, it is infiltrated with CO2, which causes the core to harden. This is called the CO2 process. Core-Making Methods Cores are made by the methods employed for sand molds. In addition, core blowers and extrusion machines are used. Core blowers force sand into the core box by compressed air at about 100 lb/in2. They can be used for making all types of small- and mediumsized cores. The cores produced are very uniform, and high production rates are achieved. Screw feed machines are used largely for plain cylindrical cores of uniform cross section. The core sand is extruded through a die onto a core plate. The use of these machines is limited to the production of stock cores, which are cut to the desired length after baking. Core Ovens Core oven walls are constructed of inner and outer
layers of sheet metal separated by rock wool or Fiberglas insulation and with interlocked joints. Combustion chambers are refractory-lined, and the hot gases are circulated by fans. They are designed for operating at temperatures suitable for the constituents in the core body. Time at baking temperatures will, likewise, vary with the composition of the core. Core driers are light skeleton cast iron or aluminum boxes, the internal shape of which conforms closely to the cope portion of the core. They are used to support, during baking, cores which cannot be placed on a flat plate. Chaplets are metallic pieces inserted into the mold cavity which support the core. Long unsupported cores will be subject to flotation force as the molten metal fills the mold and may break if the resulting flexural stresses are excessive. Likewise, the liquid forces imposed on cores as metal flows through the mold cavity may cause cores to shift. The chaplets interposed within the mold cavity are placed to alleviate these conditions. They are generally made of the same material as that being cast; they melt and blend with the metal as cast, and they remain solid long enough for the liquid forces to equilibrate through the mold cavity.