Method for production of an oxidation inhibiting titanium...

Metal founding – Process – Shaping a forming surface

Reexamination Certificate

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C164S015000, C164S520000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06802358

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to various methods of producing lost molds for titanium casting. Workpieces made of cast titanium are used to an increasing extent throughout the industry because of the excellent properties of the material and the relatively low price of titanium. Titanium is also being used to an ever greater extent in the field of technical dental applications in particular.
1. Prior Art
2. Field of the Invention
The procedure for producing a mold for titanium casting is essentially known. First, a model of the workpiece to be cast subsequently is created. To do so, preferably an especially suitable wax is used because it is good for modeling and can easily be burned out again later after embedding in the embedding compound. After modeling, a casting channel of wax wire is molded onto the model, and several models may be connected in series for one mold, depending on the size of the models. Then the model is mounted in a muffle ring or a muffle and various aids may be used such as cast rings and/or casting gate forming devices. Then the embedding compound is stirred and poured into the muffle so that the model is surrounded as a lost core and the desired mold is shaped in a negative form in the embedding compound. Next, the embedding compound is heated in a furnace according to a predetermined temperature-time profile and then cooled again. In the process, the embedding compound cures and the material of the model, which is to be melted out, is burned out of the mold. After the mold has cooled adequately, molten titanium may be cast in the mold immediately, so that the desired titanium cast part is obtained as the result.
One of the greatest disadvantages of titanium as a material is its relatively high tendency to oxidation. In casting titanium, the material tends to form an oxidation layer at the surface, which must be removed in a complicated process for most applications. The dimensional accuracy of the workpieces suffers due to this surface oxidation. Furthermore, manufacturing costs are increased because of the effort required to remove the oxidation layer. To prevent and/or minimize oxidation of titanium in casting, a variety of measures are known, aimed at influencing the casting operation itself in such a manner as to minimize oxidation. For example, it is known that molten titanium may be poured into the mold under a protective gas atmosphere.
However, experiments have shown that the surface oxidation of titanium depends to a significant extent on the manner in which the mold is processed in curing the embedding compound.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Therefore, the object of the present invention is to propose methods of producing a lost mold for titanium casting which will allow the production of cast titanium workpieces having minimal surface oxidation. This object is achieved by methods described herein.
Conventional commercial embedding compounds for titanium casting consist of a mixture of various oxides, containing mostly aluminum oxide (Al
2
O
3
) and magnesium oxide (MgO) in larger amounts. In addition, the embedding compound contains at least one additional component which can still be oxidized and in many cases consists of zirconium.
With the known methods, the zirconium should keep oxygen away from the molten titanium. However, this effect is achieved only inadequately, because the zirconium is already contaminated with oxygen in burning out the mold.
The methods according to this invention are based on the basic idea of at least limiting the contamination of the zirconium with oxygen in particular, while curing the embedding compound. This achieves the result that the greatest possible amount of unconsumed zirconium is available during titanium casting and therefore a larger amount of oxygen can be bound to the zirconium in the contact area between the titanium surface and the surface of the mold cavity. The amount of oxygen which is thus available for oxidation of titanium can be reduced in this way.
A first possibility of producing the mold is when the mold is cured under a protective gas atmosphere so that oxidation of the oxidizable component of the embedding compound is at least reduced. To do so, for example, the furnace may be purged with argon in curing the embedding compound. Of course, all other types of protective gases are also conceivable. It should be pointed out here that essentially the entire surface of the mold cavity must be adequately supplied with protective gas. To do so, for example, protective gas may be introduced into the interior of the mold so that the mold cavity is purged with protective gas.
The same effect of minimizing oxidation of the embedding compound during curing can also be achieved if curing of the mold takes place in an atmosphere with a decreased gas density. To do so, a reduced pressure or a vacuum may be established in the furnace in curing the embedding compound. Due to the decreased gas density in the interior of the furnace, fewer oxygen atoms are available for oxidation, so that oxidation processes are decreased on the whole.
Both the curing of the embedding compound under a protective gas atmosphere and curing with a decreased gas density require a certain additional complexity in terms of equipment. Very good results in minimizing oxidation of the titanium surface, however, are possible even without this additional expenditure in production of the mold. The relative degree of oxidation of the embedding compound, i.e., the ratio of the unoxidized embedding compound to the amount of oxidized embedding compound depends to a significant extent on the temperature to which the embedding compound is exposed and the duration of this exposure at a certain gas density. Consequently, high temperatures, high gas densities and a long exposure time lead to a high degree of oxidation. By decreasing the exposure time to high temperatures on the embedding compound, it is thus possible to decrease the oxidation of the oxidizable constituents of the embedding compound.
It is important to point out there that the holding time during which the temperature in the interior of the furnace is kept largely constant after reaching a maximum temperature (e.g., 850° C.) should be adapted to the quantity of embedding compound used. Because of the high temperature in the interior of the furnace, such a low gas density prevails in the interior of the furnace during the holding time that oxidation of the embedding compound is relatively minor during this period of time. Due to cooling of the interior of the furnace after the end of the holding time, the gas density in the interior of the furnace increases again drastically. Most of the oxidation therefore takes place during cooling of the mold because in this phase of the process, sufficiently high temperatures prevail for oxidation of the embedding compound and sufficiently high gas densities for a supply of atmospheric oxygen also prevail in the interior of the furnace.
According to another variant of the method according to this invention, the mold is therefore actively cooled after reaching and holding a maximum temperature, i.e., after the holding time at the maximum temperature has elapsed, in order to shorten the cooling time. The cooling should be so intense that cracking of the mold due to a great temperature stress is ruled out.
Since the measure of the allowed cooling is limited by the maximum temperature stability and the quantity of embedding compound cured, special coolants are not usually necessary. Instead, it is usually adequate if room temperature air from the ambient atmosphere is supplied to the mold for cooling. This may be achieved, for example, by the fact that the oven is not simply turned off after the end of the holding time and the mold allowed to cool slowly in the closed interior of the furnace, but instead the furnace is opened after turning off the heating and the atmosphere in the interior of the furnace is thereby exchanged with the room temperature ambient atmosphere. To increase the cooling effect with ambient air, other

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