Abstract
The effects of titanium pick-up on the heat transfer and solidification nature of mould flux, when casting titanium stabilised stainless steels, were investigated. To achieve this, the overall thermal resistance of a typical industrial mould flux was measured by means of a specially designed experimental apparatus that could simulate the casting process. The procedure was then repeated with TiO2 doped mould fluxes. A lower TiO2 content (<5%) in the test flux primarily resulted in the formation of cuspidine (Ca4Si2O7F2) upon solidification, while higher titanium levels promoted the formation of perovskite (CaO·TiO2) at the expense of cuspidine. The effect of titanium pick-up on heat transfer is largely overshadowed by the formation of a thermal contact resistance on the mould wall during flux solidification.
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