3.1. Mechanism of Shrinkage Generation in Compacted Graphite Iron
The microstructure around the shrinkage after corroding for 10 s using 4% nitric acid alcohol is shown in
Figure 8. It can be seen that the shrinkage was located in the center of the eutectic cluster, and it had an irregular shape and bumpy appearance at the edge. There was light-colored austenite crossing the shrinkage, and there was no graphite inside the austenite.
The shrinkage in the compacted graphite iron was mainly caused by its solidification characteristics and solidification mode. The solidification characteristics of the compacted graphite iron were between spherical graphite iron and flaky graphite iron, and its inside solidification was similar to the spherical graphite iron, showing paste solidification. So, it had a long eutectic solidification time, and there was a large difference between the morphology of the first solidified part and the later one. When the chemical composition was near the eutectic point, there was a solidification pattern similar to that of flaky graphite iron, that is, the precipitation of austenite dendrites followed by graphite generation [
18].
The chemical composition of the experimental compacted graphite iron was micro-sub-eutectic, showing first the precipitation of austenite and then vermicular graphite and the austenite eutectic solidification mode. When the eutectic clusters of graphite and austenite were in contact with each other, the unsolidified molten iron was divided into several discontinuous isolated melt pools by austenite dendrites and eutectic clusters, and there was no feeding channel to make up for the shrinkage.
At the same time, with the growth process of graphite eutectic groups, it became larger and larger. When they were in contact with each other, the expansion force caused by the graphite eutectic group made the austenite dendrite gap increase, so that the final solidification part could not be fed and thus the shrinkage formed.
The hot alkali corrosion method was performed to further observed the microstructure and analyze the mechanism of shrinkage formation in compacted graphite cast iron. The parameters of the hot alkali corrosion solution are shown in
Table 4, and
Figure 9 shows the color metallographic photographs of the shrinkage zone.
It can be seen that there were two locations where shrinkage occurred. It appeared in the dendritic gap, such as in
Figure 9a,b. It also appeared in the final solidification zone, as shown in
Figure 9c,d.
The solidification around the shrinkage in the dendrite gap was earlier. During the growth of the primary austenite dendrites, they overlapped each other to form a skeleton, and the liquid metal was divided into different zones. After the eutectic growth of the liquid metal in the gap, the dendrite gap also expanded, resulting in shrinkage formation in the dendrite gap. In addition, the cooling time of
Figure 9b was later than that of
Figure 9a. The austenite around the defects in
Figure 9a is light yellow and orange-red, which was the first precipitated austenite dendrite. However, the austenite in
Figure 9b is blue, which was the austenite generated by eutectic solidification, and the solidification time was later.
Another kind of shrinkage appeared in the final solidification zone outside the eutectic cluster. The color metallography showed that the zone around the shrinkage was brown, which indicates that the solidification time was the latest. There was no liquid metal to feed this zone, and the graphite was smaller and the eutectic cluster did not grow. Therefore, it could not achieve the self-feeding of graphite, resulting in the formation of shrinkage.
SEM of the interdendritic shrinkage was performed and the results are shown in
Figure 10. The interconnected dendrites and the morphology of the interdendritic shrinkage could be clearly seen. The shrinkage was concentrated in the interstices of dendrites, and the dendrites could be found to penetrate through the shrinkage. There was less graphite around the shrinkage, and the graphite size was also smaller. One way to prevent the generation of shrinkage in compacted graphite iron is to control the solidification state of molten iron to be eutectic, which can reduce the amount of austenite dendrites, so as to depress the overlap of austenite dendrites and the formation of enclosed zones.
The EDS analysis of the shrinkage zone is shown in
Figure 11. The results show that the inner surface of shrinkage had mainly C without Fe, which indicates that the remaining C in the molten iron finally precipitated on the surface of the shrinkage during solidification. The results of the line scan show that the inner surface of shrinkage had almost C, and there was a certain deviation of Si around the shrinkage. The closer the shrinkage, the less the Si, which indicated that the concentration of Si in the molten iron decreased when the isolated shrinkage was formed. According to the anti-deviation behavior of Si in austenite, the zone around the shrinkage was in the final solidification, and the supersaturated C in the final solidification zone precipitated on the inner surface of the shrinkage in the form of graphite. Therefore, another feasible way to reduce shrinkage was to make the supersaturated C in the molten iron precipitate in the form of graphite, which could have a self-feeding effect due to the low density of graphite.
According to the above analysis, the shrinkage of compacted graphite iron was related to the volume of austenite dendrites and eutectic graphite during solidification. Through the thermodynamic analysis of this process, it can be obtained.
where
is the total heat change of the system,
is the cooling without transformation, and
is the release of the total latent heat of crystallization in solidification.
The cooling of the system without transformation
could be calculated according to the thermal analysis zero curve
based on the Newtonian method [
19], and the zero curve could be given by Stefanescu [
20].
where
is the specific heat of the liquid phase,
is the density of the liquid phase,
is the volume of the sample cup, and
is the temperature change of the zero curve.
The release of the latent heat of crystallization
can be divided into two parts of primary and eutectic latent heat, and the eutectic latent heat can be divided into eutectic austenite latent heat and eutectic graphite latent heat. The release of latent heat of crystallization is calculated as follows:
where
and
are the latent heat of the solidification per unit volume of graphite and austenite, and
and
are the volume of graphite and austenite, respectively.
The total heat change of the system
can be expressed as follows:
where
is specific heat capacity of mixture,
is the mass of mixture, and
is the temperature change or the undercooling.
The variation of the specific heat capacity of the mixture at a primary crystallization stage
with time can be expressed as follows:
where
is the specific heat of the mixture at the primary crystallization stage,
are the mass fraction of the liquid phase, austenite phase, and graphite phase, respectively, and all of the
vary with time
.
where
is the temperatures of the liquid phase line,
is the temperatures at time of
, and
is the volume of austenite in the primary crystallization stage.
The change in the solid phase mass is mainly related to the nucleation of primary austenite, and the main driving force of nucleation is undercooling. The greater the undercooling, the greater the driving force, and the bigger the reaction rate. According to the equation of the metal nucleation rate, it can be expressed as [
21]:
where
is the metal nucleation rate,
is the diffusion activation energy of liquid metal atoms crossing the solid–liquid interface,
is nucleation coefficient (constant),
is Boltzmann constant,
is interfacial free energy per unit between liquid phase - nucleus,
is latent heat of crystallization,
is the undercooling,
is temperature, and
is the equilibrium crystallization point of the metals.
During the process of austenite nucleation, the change in
with the temperature is very little, and it is mainly affected by the undercooling degree. The greater the undercooling degree, the greater the nucleation rate. At the pre-nucleating stage, the change in nucleation rate with undercooling can be regarded as linear. Because the composition is almost unchanged, it can be assumed that the solid phase quality is only related to the undercooling, and at the primary crystallization stage it is only determined by the mass of primary austenite. Therefore,
where
is the time corresponding to
,
is the nucleation coefficient of primary austenite, and
is the undercooling, and undercooling is the value on the experimentally determined temperature–time curve corresponding to time
t. According to the Equations (5) and (8), it can be obtained.
where
is the specific heat of the austenite.
According to Equations (2), (3), and (9), the following equation can be obtained.
where
.
For the eutectic stage, the heat change of the system is as follows.
where
is the total heat change at the eutectic stage,
is the cooling without the phase change at the eutectic stage, and
is the volume of austenite at the eutectic stage.
Under the premise of constant mass, the following assumptions can be made.
Assumption (1): Only graphite is formed at the eutectic stage, and so there is:
Substituting Equation (13) into Equation (11), the following equation can be obtained.
where
is the heat change of the system when only graphite is formed during solidification.
Assumption (2): Only austenite is formed at the eutectic stage, and so there is:
Substituting Equation (15) into Equation (11), we can obtain the following:
where
is the heat change of the system when only austenite is formed during solidification.
The actual volume ratio
of austenite and graphite can be calculated according to Equation (17).
Substituting Equations (11), (12), (14), and (16) into Equation (17), the following equation can be obtained.
where
, and
,
,
are the volumes, which vary with time.
The eutectic growth rate can be described as:
where
R is the eutectic growth rate,
is the undercooling, and
and
are the coefficients of eutectic growth. For the eutectic solidification process of cast iron,
= 2. So, the eutectic growth rate
R of compacted graphite iron is proportional to the square of the undercooling
[
22]. Therefore, the variation of the solid phase mass with time during the eutectic period can be written as:
where
is the ratio of solid phase mass at the eutectic stage. When
,
, and
can be calculated. In addition, the mass ratio of graphite at the eutectic stage can be calculated using Equation (21).
where
is the mass ratio of graphite at the eutectic stage.
The specific heat capacity of the eutectic stage
is:
According to the law of conservation of mass, the following can be obtained:
Equations (11), (12), (22), and (23), give us the following.
where
,
,
are volume variables with time.
The values of the thermophysical parameters in the above equations are shown in
Table 5. Using Equations (18), (23), and (24), we can obtain
and
. According to the thermal analysis curve and the thermophysical parameters in
Table 5 [
23,
24,
25], the relationship curves between the phase volume change, solid phase rate of the solidification process and time can be obtained, as shown in
Figure 12.
As can be seen from
Figure 12a, the total volume of the melt at the primary crystallization stage decreases with the precipitation of the primary austenite, expressing a tendency to shrink. When the precipitation of the primary austenite is increased, the shrinkage of the melt is also accelerated. At the eutectic stage, the precipitation of graphite causes the total volume to expand continuously, which plays a role of self-feeding. The calculated results of the solidification process are in agreement with the previous microstructure observation. The overall curve of the solidification process is shown in
Figure 12b. The solid phase rate at the primary crystallization stage increases with the increase in undercooling. The change in solid phase rate at the eutectic stage is the same as the change of the temperature curve. The faster the temperature rises back, the faster the solid phase rate increases. The faster the latent heat of the crystallization releases at the eutectic stage, the faster the temperature rises back. This is consistent with the theoretical analysis. Thus, the solidification of compacted graphite iron can be judged by the volume change of each phase during solidification, and the volume change of each phase can be characterized by the cooling curve of the solidification process.
3.2. Shrinkage Prediction in Compacted Graphite Iron
According to formation mechanism of shrinkage, by analyzing the relationship between the thermal analysis curve and the solidification process, some new characteristic points can be achieved, mainly including the characteristic temperature difference of the thermal analysis, the time difference corresponding to the characteristic temperatures, the initial heat release, and the overall heat release of eutectic process. Their meanings and calculation formulas are shown in
Table 6, where
represents the temperature–time function.
A typical correlation analysis was carried out on the parameters, such as the main elements of iron, the characteristic values of thermal analysis, the initial heat release, and the overall heat release, in order to find the correlation between each parameter and the shrinkage, and the results are shown in
Table 7 [
26]. In this paper, we used the typical correlation analysis function of SPSS software for typical correlation analysis of each group of data, to obtain the data shown in
Table 7.
From the canonical loadings, there are nine parameters that have a greater impact on the shrinkage, and they are Mn, P, S, Cu, , , , , and . Among them, the parameters of Cu, , and are negatively correlated and the rest are positively correlated.
Based on the results of the typical correlation analysis, the artificial neural network with superior nonlinear mapping capability is used to predict the shrinkage tendency. A BP neural network model is established as shown in
Figure 13, which includes a 9-node input layer, two hidden layers with 12 nodes and 4 nodes, and a 1-node output layer. The nodes of the input layer are nine parameters obtained from the typical correlation analysis, and the node of the output layer is the shrinkage tendency of iron. After training the model, the results are shown in
Figure 14, and its R value is obtained as 97%.
Figure 15 shows the relationship between the shrinkage tendency
Pi and the shrinkage shape. Here the shrinkage is circled in red. The larger
Pi, the greater the shrinkage tendency. Therefore,
Pi calculated by the BP model can be used to make an effective prediction of the shrinkage tendency of compacted graphite iron.