Metal Casting Technique: An Overview
Received: 17-Sep-2021 / Accepted Date: 23-Sep-2021 / Published Date: 30-Sep-2021 DOI: 10.4172/2168-9806.1000005
Opinion
Metal casting is a complicated and detailed process that necessitates precise chemistry and flawless execution. While modern technologies are relatively new in comparison to the history of human civilisation, the first metal casting may be traced back to roughly 4000 BC. Due of the difficulties in acquiring pure ore at the period, gold was the first metal to be cast because of its malleability, and metal from tools and adornment was reused. A copper frog, on the other hand, is the oldest known casting; it is thought to have been created in Mesopotamia around 3200 BC. Because of its stiffness in comparison to gold, bronze became the metal of choice for casting, and it was melted and formed into numerous tools and weapons using permanent stone moulds. By 2800 BC, the technology of casting had made its way to Egypt, and efficiently performing this procedure was enormously significant on their rise to dominance throughout the Bronze Age. Fast ahead nearly 1000 years, and religion played a significant part in expanding and innovating foundry technology at the period. The construction of cathedrals and churches resulted in extraordinary evolution, as melting and mould-making technologies evolved fast to meet the demands of the dominating Catholic church. This also marked the transition from casting for the sake of art to casting as a technology with untapped possibilities. After the British colonies were formed in the New World, the first “American” casting plant was created in Saugus, Massachusetts, almost 200 years later. Saugus Iron Works, which opened in 1645, received tax exemption as well as a 20-year monopoly on all iron manufacturing from the Massachusetts General Court. Almost 300 years later, after being a private museum run by the Iron and Steel Institute for 15 years, this birthplace of the American iron and steel industry was designated a National Historic Site in 1968.
The process of producing a product or part from molten metal using any type of mould to dictate its ultimate shape is referred to as metal casting. A metal casting, on the other hand, is a finished product or component of the metal casting process. We use the term casting interchangeably throughout this article and on our website, either as a stand-in for the process of metal casting or for the item, a metal casting. The metal casting methods listed below are some of the most frequent and adaptable procedures in a casting facility’s arsenal. Some procedures stretch back thousands of years, while others are only a century old, and each of these processes is ideal for certain types of items.
Investment casting is the oldest metal casting technology still in use on a large scale. It is a clever procedure that requires covering a wax pattern shaped like the final product in refractory material, then melting out the wax and replacing it with molten metal.
Greensand casting is a versatile metal casting technology with cheap tooling costs that involves compacting moist, clay-bonded sand around a design to make a mould. The resulting moulds can cast almost any alloy, and the bulk of the sand used to produce the mould can be retrieved and recycled.
Shell mould casting, also known as shell casting or shell moulding, was devised in the mid-20th century by a German engineer and was later perfected by manufacturers in the United States and Germany. The procedure entails coating a pattern with resin-coated sand grains that adhere to one another when heated. Shell mould casting has a high degree of precision and repeatability.
Metal casting is now a $33 billion industry that employs almost 200,000 people in the United States alone. Castings are used in 90% of durable goods, ranging from construction equipment to medical gadgets. “Most people are rarely more than 10 feet away from a casting,” according to the American Foundry Society. New technologies and improved methods are making metal castings better and more complicated than ever before, allowing foundries to grow into new industries and increase the metal casting industry’s prominence.
Citation: Geethanjali K (2021) Metal Casting Technique: An Overview. J Powder Metall Min Res 10: 5. DOI: 10.4172/2168-9806.1000005
Copyright: © 2021 Geethanjali K. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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