The Importance of Metal Quality in Molten Secondary Aluminum

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
C. Edward Eckert Brian Cochran
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
31
File Size:
3136 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

"EXECUTIVE SUMMARYINTRODUCTIONThe commercial incentives for using molten aluminum in casting operations are numerous and substantial. Although these incentives apply broadly to both shape castings (foundry) operations and wrought alloy production, the merit of a particular motive is indeed downstream processing sensitive. Melting cost reduction is a universal incentive that impacts on essentially all aluminum products. At a natural gas burner cost of $4.50 per therm, for example, the reverberatory furnace energy cost is at least $0.01 per pound of aluminum melted, exclusive of melt loss, fixed costs, and other expenses. The Aluminum Statistical Review' cited 3.188 million metric tons of secondary aluminum that was recovered by the industry in 1995. This represents a re-melt energy cost of over $70 million. Other incentives to use molten secondary aluminum include throughput enhancement, metal chemistry assurances, environmental considerations, and the avoidance of an in-house scrap processing operation.A traditional disincentive to use molten secondary aluminum is metal quality. If a particular secondary processing operation was successful in achieving and preserving an acceptable metal quality level prior to shipment, the subsequent metal transfer and ladle delivery events would frequently obviate these efforts. For example, a metal superheat on the order of several hundred degrees is required for an unheated transfer ladle to travel 3 to 4 hours to a customer location. The rate of the y-alumina formation reaction approximately doubles for every 120°F increase in temperature, therefore, the effect of excess superheat on melt loss and metal quality is considerable. Linear oxidation reactions, such as magnesia formation in magnesium containing alloys, are influenced to an even greater extent by temperature.The typical quality detractor events are:"
Citation

APA: C. Edward Eckert Brian Cochran  (2000)  The Importance of Metal Quality in Molten Secondary Aluminum

MLA: C. Edward Eckert Brian Cochran The Importance of Metal Quality in Molten Secondary Aluminum. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2000.

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