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Journal ArticleDOI

Mold behavior and its influence on quality in the continuous casting of steel slabs: Part i. Industrial trials, mold temperature measurements, and mathematical modeling

TL;DR: In this paper, an extensive study has been conducted to elucidate mold behavior and its influence on quality during the continuous casting of slabs, which combined industrial measurements, mathe matical modeling, and metallographic examination of cast slab samples.
Abstract: An extensive study has been conducted to elucidate mold behavior and its influence on quality during the continuous casting of slabs. The study combined industrial measurements, mathe matical modeling, and metallographic examination of cast slab samples. The industrial mea surements involved instrumenting an operating slab mold with 114 thermocouples in order to determine the axial mold wall temperature profiles for a wide range of casting conditions. A three-dimensional (3-D) heat-flow model of the mold wall was developed to characterize the heat fluxes in the mold quantitatively from the measured mold temperature data. Furthermore, heat-flow models were developed to examine steel solidification phenomena and mold flux behavior at the meniscus. Slab samples collected during the industrial trials were examined metallographically to evaluate the cast structure and defects. Owing to the length of the study, it is presented in two parts, the first of which describes the experimental techniques employed in the instrumentation of the mold together with the details of the industrial trials and mold temperature measurements. Also, the mathematical modeling technique applied to determine the axial heat-flux profiles from the measured mold temperature data is presented. It is shown that a fully 3-D model of the mold wall is needed to convert the measured temperatures to heat-flux profiles properly.
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a model of heat transfer and solidification of the continuous casting of steel slabs is described, including phenomena in the mold and spray regions, which can be applied to a wide range of practical problems in continuous casters.
Abstract: A simple, but comprehensive model of heat transfer and solidification of the continuous casting of steel slabs is described, including phenomena in the mold and spray regions. The model includes a one-dimensional (1-D) transient finite-difference calculation of heat conduction within the solidifying steel shell coupled with two-dimensional (2-D) steady-state heat conduction within the mold wall. The model features a detailed treatment of the interfacial gap between the shell and mold, including mass and momentum balances on the solid and liquid interfacial slag layers, and the effect of oscillation marks. The model predicts the shell thickness, temperature distributions in the mold and shell, thickness of the resolidified and liquid powder layers, heat-flux profiles down the wide and narrow faces, mold water temperature rise, ideal taper of the mold walls, and other related phenomena. The important effect of the nonuniform distribution of superheat is incorporated using the results from previous three-dimensional (3-D) turbulent fluid-flow calculations within the liquid pool. The FORTRAN program CONID has a user-friendly interface and executes in less than 1 minute on a personal computer. Calibration of the model with several different experimental measurements on operating slab casters is presented along with several example applications. In particular, the model demonstrates that the increase in heat flux throughout the mold at higher casting speeds is caused by two combined effects: a thinner interfacial gap near the top of the mold and a thinner shell toward the bottom. This modeling tool can be applied to a wide range of practical problems in continuous casters.

381 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of state-of-the-art models for continuous casting can be found in this paper, where the authors focus on practical applications to the formation of defects in continuous casting.
Abstract: Continuous casting is a mature, sophisticated technological process, used to produce most of the world’s steel, so is worthy of fundamentally-based computational modeling. It involves many interacting phenomena including heat transfer, solidification, multiphase turbulent flow, clogging, electromagnetic effects, complex interfacial behavior, particle entrapment, thermal-mechanical distortion, stress, cracks, segregation, and microstructure formation. Furthermore, these phenomena are transient, three-dimensional, and operate over wide length and time scales. This paper reviews the current state of the art in modeling these phenomena, focusing on practical applications to the formation of defects. It emphasizes model verification and validation of model predictions. The models reviewed range from fast and simple for implementation into online model-based control systems to sophisticated multiphysics simulations that incorporate many coupled phenomena. Both the accomplishments and remaining challenges are discussed.

147 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured axial heat-flux profiles from temperature measurements conducted on a slab mold under routine operating conditions and found that the heat flux was observed to have a maximum value at the meniscus and to decline with increasing distance down the mold.
Abstract: Axial heat-flux profiles have been determined quantitatively from temperature measurements conducted on a slab mold under routine operating conditions. As in earlier studies, the heat flux was observed to have a maximum value at the meniscus and to decline with increasing distance down the mold. The mold heat flux increased with increasing casting speed and was greater with a mold powder having lower viscosity and melting point being applied as lubricant. The heat extraction was largest while casting 0.29 pet carbon steel and least for a 0.09 pet carbon grade; reducing the depth of the submerged entry nozzle increased the heat flux slightly in the upper region of the mold. Most significant was the higher heat flux observed at the meniscus of the outside-radius face, attributable to the locally greater copper plate thickness compared to that of the opposite broad face. All of the measurements can be explained straightforwardly by heat flow in the vicinity of the meniscus and the resulting behavior of the so-called slag rim adjacent to the mold wall. It is postulated that the difference in copper plate thickness between the two broad faces at the meniscus causes the slag rim to be smaller on the outside-radius face which gives rise to shallower oscillation marks, as observed, higher heat transfer, and a slightly thicker solid shell. The dissimilar behavior has implications for quality because the inside-radius shell, experiencing reduced heat extraction, cools and shrinks less than the outside-radius shell. Thus, for a given end-plate taper, the narrow face of the slab adjacent to the inside radius can push against the end plate, accelerating copper wear, and, owing to squeezing of the broad face, cause an off-corner depression and subsurface crack toward the mold exit. If this is correct, maintenance of the same copper plate thickness at the meniscus is fundamental to preventing such an occurrence. Moreover, adjustment of the heat extraction at the meniscus should be achievable by changing copper plate thickness, mold coating thickness/conductivity, cooling water velocity, cooling channel configuration, and mold flux composition for a given steel grade.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results provide proof-of-concept for a fully automated crack detection system based on the presented method, utilizing morphological image processing and statistical classification by logistic regression based on 3D profile data of steel slab surfaces.
Abstract: Continuous casting is a highly efficient process used to produce most of the world steel production tonnage, but can cause cracks in the semi-finished steel product output. These cracks may cause problems further down the production chain, and detecting them early in the process would avoid unnecessary and costly processing of the defective goods. In order for a crack detection system to be accepted in industry, however, false detection of cracks in non-defective goods must be avoided. This is further complicated by the presence of scales; a brittle, often cracked, top layer originating from the casting process. We present an approach for an automated on-line crack detection system, based on 3D profile data of steel slab surfaces, utilizing morphological image processing and statistical classification by logistic regression. The initial segmentation successfully extracts 80% of the crack length present in the data, while discarding most potential pseudo-defects (non-defect surface features similar to defects). The subsequent statistical classification individually has a crack detection accuracy of over 80% (with respect to total segmented crack length), while discarding all remaining manually identified pseudo-defects. Taking more ambiguous regions into account gives a worst-case false classification of 131 mm within the 30 600 mm long sequence of 150 mm wide regions used as validation data. The combined system successfully identifies over 70% of the manually identified (unambiguous) crack length, while missing only a few crack regions containing short crack segments. The results provide proof-of-concept for a fully automated crack detection system based on the presented method.

83 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the formation mechanism of oscillation marks was studied and the success of casting practices used in industry to reduce the severity of OSSs can be explained using this proposed hypothesis.
Abstract: The restrictions on quality for low carbon continuously cast slab products require that surface defects be kept to a minimum. Currently, the steel industry has developed a wealth of experience on how to apply slabs with oscillation marks to very demanding applications. However, these practices circumvent the problem, rather than solving it. By understanding the formation mechanism of oscillation marks, one can then develop casting practices that can minimize their effect on slab surface quality. The techniques developed in this study allowed a more detailed examination of the mold heat-transfer interactions during continuous casting, such that the variations of heat flux due to irregular solidification near the meniscus could be measured. It is shown that the mechanisms proposed in the literature are not individually sufficient for the formation of an oscillation mark, but that several are necessary and must occur in sequence for an oscillation mark to form. A mechanism is proposed for the formation of oscillation marks that is shown to be in agreement with the trends observed and reported in the literature. Additionally, it is shown that the success of practices used in industry to reduce the severity of oscillation marks can be explained using this proposed hypothesis.

82 citations

References
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Book
01 Jan 1980
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on heat and mass transfer, fluid flow, chemical reaction, and other related processes that occur in engineering equipment, the natural environment, and living organisms.
Abstract: This book focuses on heat and mass transfer, fluid flow, chemical reaction, and other related processes that occur in engineering equipment, the natural environment, and living organisms. Using simple algebra and elementary calculus, the author develops numerical methods for predicting these processes mainly based on physical considerations. Through this approach, readers will develop a deeper understanding of the underlying physical aspects of heat transfer and fluid flow as well as improve their ability to analyze and interpret computed results.

21,858 citations

Book
01 Jan 1940
TL;DR: The Reynolds Transport Theorem and the Impulse-Momentum Principle as discussed by the authors have been used to describe the behavior of real and simulated real fluids. But they do not describe the dynamics of real fluid flow.
Abstract: Fundamentals. Fluid Statics. Kinematics of Fluid Motion. Systems, Control Volumes, Conservation of Mass, and The Reynolds Transport Theorem. Flow of an Incompressible Ideal Fluid. The Impulse--Momentum Principle. Flow of a Real Fluid. Similitude, Dimensional Analysis and Normalization of Equations of Motion. Flow in Pipes. Flow in Open Channels. Lift and Drag--Incompressible Flow. Introduction to Fluid Machinery. Flow of Compressible Fluids. Fluid Measurements. Appendices. Index.

439 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors measured axial heat-flux profiles from temperature measurements conducted on a slab mold under routine operating conditions and found that the heat flux was observed to have a maximum value at the meniscus and to decline with increasing distance down the mold.
Abstract: Axial heat-flux profiles have been determined quantitatively from temperature measurements conducted on a slab mold under routine operating conditions. As in earlier studies, the heat flux was observed to have a maximum value at the meniscus and to decline with increasing distance down the mold. The mold heat flux increased with increasing casting speed and was greater with a mold powder having lower viscosity and melting point being applied as lubricant. The heat extraction was largest while casting 0.29 pet carbon steel and least for a 0.09 pet carbon grade; reducing the depth of the submerged entry nozzle increased the heat flux slightly in the upper region of the mold. Most significant was the higher heat flux observed at the meniscus of the outside-radius face, attributable to the locally greater copper plate thickness compared to that of the opposite broad face. All of the measurements can be explained straightforwardly by heat flow in the vicinity of the meniscus and the resulting behavior of the so-called slag rim adjacent to the mold wall. It is postulated that the difference in copper plate thickness between the two broad faces at the meniscus causes the slag rim to be smaller on the outside-radius face which gives rise to shallower oscillation marks, as observed, higher heat transfer, and a slightly thicker solid shell. The dissimilar behavior has implications for quality because the inside-radius shell, experiencing reduced heat extraction, cools and shrinks less than the outside-radius shell. Thus, for a given end-plate taper, the narrow face of the slab adjacent to the inside radius can push against the end plate, accelerating copper wear, and, owing to squeezing of the broad face, cause an off-corner depression and subsurface crack toward the mold exit. If this is correct, maintenance of the same copper plate thickness at the meniscus is fundamental to preventing such an occurrence. Moreover, adjustment of the heat extraction at the meniscus should be achievable by changing copper plate thickness, mold coating thickness/conductivity, cooling water velocity, cooling channel configuration, and mold flux composition for a given steel grade.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of the following variables on mould temperatures has been studied: water inlet temperature, water velocity, direction of water flow, scale deposition, wall thickness, thermal conductivity, casting speed and carbon content of the steel being cast.

53 citations