Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 August 2009
In this chapter, fundamental features of the metal spray forming process are introduced in terms of their science and applications. Chapter 1 saw the division of the process into three main steps:
disintegration (or atomization),
spray establishment, and
compaction.
Now, a more detailed introduction to those subprocesses that are especially important for application within the spray forming process, will be given.
The spray forming process
Spray forming is a metallurgical process that combines the main advantages of the two classical approaches to base manufacturing of sophisticated materials and preforms, i.e.:
metal casting: involving high-volume production and near-net shape forming,
powder metallurgy: involving near-net shape forming (at small volumes) to yield a homogeneous, fine-grained microstructure.
The spray forming process essentially combines atomization and spraying of a metal melt with the consolidation and compaction of the sprayed mass on a substrate. A typical technical plant sketch and systematic scheme of the spray forming process (as realized within several technical facilities and within the pilot-plant-scale facilities at the University of Bremen, which will be mainly referenced here) is illustrated in Figure 2.1. In the context of spray forming, a metallurgically prepared and premixed metal melt is distributed from the melting crucible via a tundish into the atomization area. Here, in most applications, inert gas jets with high kinetic energy impinge onto the metal stream and cause melt disintegration (twin-fluid atomization). In the resulting spray, the droplets are accelerated towards the substrate and thereby cool down and partly solidify due to intensive heat transfer to the cold atomization gas.
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