Modeling of the Twin-Roll Casting Process: Transition from Casting to Rolling

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Abstract

During twin-roll casting, an alloy melt is passing the gap between two counter-rotating rolls, where cooling and solidification leads to the continuous formation of a solid strand. In order to describe this process, a two-phase Eulerian–Eulerian volume-averaging model is presented that accounts for (1) transport and growth of spherical grains within a flowing melt, (2) the formation of a coherent solid network above a specific solid fraction and (3) the viscoplastic flow of the solid network with the interstitial melt during casting and compression. For the considered case of an inoculated Al–4wt%Cu alloy, the process conditions are chosen such that two relatively thick viscoplastic semi-solid shells meet between the rolls, and thus, the material is pressed together and squeezed against the casting direction. The squeezed out material consists of segregated melt and some solid that quickly disappears after melting. It is observed during this study that macrosegregation distributions are inherently connected to the mush deformation that is enforced during the hot rolling process.

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Rodrigues, C., Ludwig, A., Kharicha, A., & Wu, M. (2018). Modeling of the Twin-Roll Casting Process: Transition from Casting to Rolling. Transactions of the Indian Institute of Metals, 71(11), 2645–2649. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12666-018-1423-8

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