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Mold behavior and its influence on quality in the continuous casting of steel slabs: Part II. Mold heat transfer, mold flux behavior, formation of oscillation marks, longitudinal off-corner depressions, and subsurface cracks

TLDR
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.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation on Carbonizing From Mold Flux into Ultra-low-Carbon Steel During Continuous Casting

TL;DR: In this article , an experimental method has been adopted to study the carbonizing behavior of mold flux into liquid steel during continuous casting of ultra-low-carbon liquid steel, and the locations where carbonizing occurs during the continuous casting process were predicted by ANSYS Fluent numerical simulations.

Thermo-mechanical model of a strand in the mould of a continuous casting plant

TL;DR: In this paper, a slice of the strand is modelled and its evolution is observed, and the main results are temperature field and solidification evolution, stress, strain and strain rate fields and losses of contact and returns to contact analysis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The formation of oscillation marks in the continuous casting of steel slabs

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation of oscillation marks on the surface of continuously cast slabs has been studied by metallographically examining slab samples and by performing a set of mathematical analyses of heat flow, lubrication, and meniscus shape.
Journal ArticleDOI

Formation of longitudinal, midface cracks in continuously-cast slabs

TL;DR: In this article, a mechanism for the formation of longitudinal, midface cracks in strand-cast slabs has been elucidated based on a series of related investigations, and the influence of the impinging metal stream, mold-powder practice, metal-level control, steel composition, end-plate taper, submold support and spray practice on the formation is explained in terms of this mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of oscillation-mark formation on the surface quality of continuously cast steel slabs

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the formation of oscillation marks on the surface quality of the slabs has been examined by metallographic in-vestigation of slab samples and by performing a set of mathematical analyses.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Structural Effects and Band Segregate Formation during the Electromagnetic Stirring of Strand-Cast Steel

TL;DR: In this article, the role of electromagnetic stirring in the formation of the white band and in the associated columnar-equiaxed transition is discussed, along with theoretical calculations.
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