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Compound Castings for the Coke Industry.

Tomasz Wróbel
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
In this paper, issues related to the technology of compound castings composed of two parts, i.e., the working layer and the supporting part, made of X46Cr13 high-chromium steel and EN-GJL-HB 255 grey cast iron, respectively, in a liquid-solid system by pre-installing a monolithic insert in the mould cavity are presented. As a part of the research, the mechanism of formation of transitional zones in the bonding area of the above-mentioned two alloys was identified and described. It was shown that the phenomenon that determines the formation of a permanent bond between the joined materials is the transport of C and heat from the "high-carbon and hot" material of the supporting part poured into the mould in the form of liquid cast iron to the "low-carbon and cold" material of the working layer placed in the form of a steel monolithic insert inside the mould cavity. In the paper, the suitability of the compound castings technology developed for use in the coke industry is also presented. Full-size high-chromium steel-grey cast iron compound casting plates designed for the coke quenching car lining were positively verified in real coke plant operating conditions.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • white matter
  • iron deficiency
  • liquid chromatography
  • molecularly imprinted
  • heat stress