What is Electromagnetic Pumping?
Aluminum and other light metal casting foundries
have traditionally used the technique of pouring the molten metal into molds
from a ladle, relying on gravity to fill the small spaces in the mold cavity.
This must be done very carefully so the molten metal does not experience
oxidizing turbulence. The nature of molten aluminum as a strong reactant gives
it an affinity to combine with the common components in air, water vapor and
oxygen. Humidity in the air can react quickly, creating both aluminum oxide, a
ceramic, and hydrogen in solution.
Any oxidized metal that is
trapped or forms within the cast part is considered a structural defect and can
cause premature failure. The free hydrogen in solution is progressively ejected
and forms voids (pinhole porosity) as the metal cools and solidifies, effectively
weakening the part. In the past, before aluminum and other light metals and
alloys were commonly used, cast parts were large, thick and made of robust
iron. Defects caused by the turbulence in traditional ladle pouring were not a
big issue.
Today, the market demands greater efficiency in
transportation, requiring the use of more parts made of light metals. The
advancement of computers has also had an effect. Engineers are designing more
refined, structurally accurate parts where minimizing materials investment has a
high priority and wasting energy is not permitted. Safety, last but not least,
relies on the sound structural integrity of the parts manufactured.
The ideal scenario is for air and water to never touch the melt. Although this is
not commercially feasible or obtainable at reasonable cost, the CMI Novacast system is the
closest to it, and measures can be taken to further approach the ideal. The
amount of melt that is actually exposed to the atmosphere and is introduced into
the cast part is at a near ideal minimum.
CMI Novacast builds electromagnetic
pumps that draw the molten metal from deep within the furnace where the melt is
potentially at its cleanest, then filter the liquid, and pump it up from the
bottom or from the side of the mold. Electromagnetic pumps have no moving parts.
No metals or contaminants touch the melt. The melt is contacted only by our
carefully processed ceramics, so the alloy remains as specified. The launder
systems are temperature controlled so the melt stays at the temperature desired.
And, since the surface of the "pour" air exposure is minimized, the
furnace temperature can be kept lower. Compared with any other pressurized
foundry delivery system, the CMI Novacast system has proven to be the lowest cost and easiest
to maintain of all. Downtime is reduced to minutes, not hours or days, which allows for more
time to fill castings and make profits.