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Free-boundary problems in the mould region of the continuous steel casting process
Date
2020
Abstract
Continuous casting is an industrial process where molten metal is solidiļ¬ed into products, such as bars, billets, blooms and slabs. The occurrence of oscillation marks and air gaps in steel casting are casting phenomena that can be modelled as free-boundary problems. Oscillation marks are small, undesirable defects that occur on the surface of continuously cast steel. These marks are, in general, evenly spaced indentations on the steel surface that are no more than a few millimetres deep. We use mathematical modelling and asymptotic reductions to develop a model which helps further our understanding of oscillationmark formation and the factors that inļ¬uence their depth. A model is developed and non-dimensionalised before simpliļ¬cations are made on the basis of the smallness of the dimensionless parameters. The model is compared with a previous model and with experimentally measured oscillation marks. The model is extended and an unexpected hysteresislike phenomenon is observed. During the continuous casting process, the solidiļ¬ed steel can sever its contact with the mould wall due to thermal contraction, allowing air to inļ¬ltrate the space vacated by the steel. This causes a signiļ¬cant reduction in the heat transfer from the mould due to the thermally insulating properties of air. An asymptotic, thermomechanical model is developed. The model is described and non-dimensionalised and reductions are made. The reduced model is solved using numerical methods. Finally, the model is compared to a previous ļ¬nite element model and experimental measurements.
Supervisor
Vynnycky, Michael
Mitchell, Sarah L.
O'Brien, Stephen B.G.
Mitchell, Sarah L.
O'Brien, Stephen B.G.
Description
peer-reviewed
Publisher
Citation
Collections
Files
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Devine_2020_Free.pdf
Adobe PDF, 9.12 MB
Funding code
Funding Information
Irish Research Council (IRC)
Sustainable Development Goals
External Link
Type
Thesis
Rights
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/
