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Patent Searching and Data


Title:
VACUUM PROCESSING OF REACTIVE METAL
Document Type and Number:
WIPO Patent Application WO/1992/001818
Kind Code:
A1
Abstract:
In the particular embodiments described in the specification, a vacuum furnace includes a conveying arrangement for holding four solid metal members (16, 22) with their end faces (18) in closely-spaced relation and an energy beam gun (11) directs energy (12) to the adjacent faces to melt the metal. Metal (20) ejected from the heated surfaces by explosive vaporization of inclusions in the metal is trapped by the adjacent surfaces of the other metal members.

Inventors:
HARKER HOWARD R (US)
Application Number:
PCT/US1991/003951
Publication Date:
February 06, 1992
Filing Date:
June 05, 1991
Export Citation:
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Assignee:
JOHNSON AXEL METALS (US)
International Classes:
C21C7/10; C22B9/22; B22D27/02; C22B34/12; F27B3/10; F27B3/18; F27D99/00; (IPC1-7): C21C7/10
Foreign References:
US3342250A1967-09-19
Other References:
See also references of EP 0493591A4
Download PDF:
Claims:
Claims
1. A method for vacuum processing of metal contain¬ ing vaporizable impurities comprising supplying metal to a vacuum furnace in the form of a member having a surface to be melted by energy impinge¬ ment, providing at least one further surface closely adjacent to the surface to be melted to receive metal particles ejected from the surface to be melted upon heating thereof by energy im pingement, and directing an energy beam toward the surface of the member to be melted in a melt¬ ing region to melt material at the surface.
2. A method according to Claim 1 wherein the adja¬ cent surface is the surface of another metal member to be melted.
3. A method according to Claim 1 including providing a plurality of surfaces closely adjacent to the end surface of the solid member to receive metal ejected therefrom.
4. A method according to Claim 1 including moving the solid member toward the melting region as the surface thereof is melted by the energy beam.
5. A method according to Claim 1 wherein the adja¬ cent surface is the end surface of a second metal member to be melted and including moving the second metal member toward the melting region as the end surface thereof is melted by the energy beam.
6. A method according to Claim 1 including providing three further metal members having surfaces closely adjacent to the surface of the metal member to be melted.
7. A method according to Claim 6 including moving each of the further metal members toward the melting region as the surfaces thereof are melted.
8. A vacuum furnace for processing metal comprising energy gun means disposed to direct a beam of energy toward a melting region, conveyor means . for guiding a metal member having an end surface toward the melting region to expose the end sur face thereof to an energy beam from the energy gun, and confining means adjacent to the melting region providing at least one confining surface closely adjacent to the end surface of a metal member conveyed by the conveyor means toward the melting region to receive metal ejected from the end surface of the metal member upon heating thereof.
9. A vacuum furnace according to Claim 8 wherein the confining means comprises a plurality of metal members having surfaces disposed adjacent to the surface of the metal member being melted.
10. A vacuum furnace according to Claim 9 including conveying means for conveying each of the plural¬ ity of metal members toward the melting region.
Description:
Description

Vacuum Processing of Reactive Metal

Technical Field

This invention relates to improvements in vacuum processing of reactive metal, such as in an electron beam or plasma furnace, and to an improved furnace for use in such processing.

Background Art

Certain reactive metals such as titanium, for example, are prepared by reduction of chlorides of the metals using sodium or magnesium to produce sponge metal. Such sponge metals, however, contain trapped sodium or magnesium chloride and, when heated in a vacuum such as in an electron beam or plasma furnace, the trapped chlorides vaporize in an explosive manner, spraying unmelted sponge particles throughout the interior of the furnace so as to reduce the yield and also contaminate material which has been refined in the furnace with unrefined particles. Similarly, scrap material resulting from the machining or other forming of such metals which has been compacted into a solid piece for processing may contain vaporizable impurities which produce the same effect.

One way of avoiding this problem is to use an inert gas plasma burner which operates at higher pres¬ sures, as described in the Ulrich Patent No. 3,771,585, but this does not provide the advantages of an electron beam or plasma furnace operated at high vacuum. The Hanks Patent No. 3,101,515 discloses an electron beam furnace with magnetically guided beams in order to avoid contamination of the electron beam source by sponge particles explosively ejected from the raw material, but that arrangement does not avoid the problem of lost material and contamination of the

refined material. The Herres Patent No. 2,734,244 discloses a vacuum arc refining furnace for titanium sponge which requires a separate chamber to vaporize and drive off volatile inclusions from the sponge material which might interfere with the refining pro¬ cess, after which the material is delivered to the refining furnace.

Disclosure of Invention

Accordingly, it is an object of the present in- vention to provide a new and improved process for vacuum refining metal materials which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the prior art.

Another object of the invention is to provide a vacuum furnace for processing reactive metals in an improved manner.

These and other objects of the invention are attained by supplying a metal member to be processed in a vacuum furnace by application of energy to an exposed surface of the metal member and providing one or more closely-spaced spray-intercepting surfaces to block unmelted material sprayed from the heated sur¬ face of the metal member from reaching other parts of the vacuum furnace. In one embodiment, one or more of the blocking surfaces is provided by one or more addi- tional metal members to be processed. In this arrangement, the additional metal members have closely adjacent surfaces which are also heated by the appli¬ cation of energy and, preferably, an array of three or more metal members have adjacent surfaces substanti- ally enclosing the region in which the metal is heated by the energy application.

In a typical vacuum furnace arranged for proces¬ sing metal according to the invention, four metal members are supported with their end surfaces disposed in closely-spaced opposed relation and an energy source positioned above the region surrounded by the opposed surfaces supplies energy to all of the adja-

cent metal surfaces to melt the metal simultaneously and cause the molten metal to flow into a receptacle such as a trough or hearth beneath the region sur¬ rounded by the surfaces. Thus, substantially all of the solid metal particles sprayed from the heated surfaces by vaporized inclusions as the metal surfaces are heated is merely deposited on an adjacent metal surface for melting or else drops into the receptacle for molten material flowing from those surfaces. Further objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from a reading of the following de¬ scription in conjunction with the accompanying draw¬ ings in which:

Brief Description of Drawings Fig. 1 is a schematic side view of the melting region of a representative embodiment of a vacuum furnace arranged in accordance with the invention; and

Fig. 2 is a schematic plan view of the region of the furnace shown in Fig. 1.

Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention

In the representative embodiment of the invention shown in the drawings, the melting region 10 of a vacuum furnace, which may, for example, be an electron beam or plasma furnace having an evacuated enclosure (not shown) includes an electron beam or plasma gun 11 arranged in the usual manner to direct a beam of energy 12 in a controlled pattern to heat the metallic raw material to be melted and processed in the fur¬ nace. A hearth 13 arranged to receive the metallic material to be processed has a receiving portion 14 irradiated by the gun 11 for receiving molten metal to form a pool 15 which flows from the receiving portion toward a refining portion, not shown in the drawing, where the molten metal is refined and subsequently poured into a casting mold.

Solid metal such as titanium sponge which con¬ tains included vaporizable substances such as sodium or magnesium chloride as a result of the sponge forma¬ tion process or compacted scrap metal containing va- porizable impurities is supplied to the furnace in the form of a solid member such as an electrode 16 and is fed toward the melting region 10 by a conveyor ar¬ rangement 17. Impingement of energy from the gun 11 on the front surface 18 of the electrode 16 melts the material at the surface, producing a molten stream 19 which flows from the front surface into the hearth 13. Because the electrode contains vaporizable inclusions, heating of the surface 18 causes the vaporizable mate¬ rial to be vaporized rapidly and to eject solid or partially melted metal away from the surface 18 as indicated by the arrows 20.

In accordance with the invention, the front sur¬ face 18 of the electrode 16 is substantially sur¬ rounded by closely adjacent surfaces which receive and trap the material ejected from the surface 18. In the illustrated embodiment, three additional metal elec¬ trodes 21, 22 and 23 are arranged as best seen in Fig. 2 to form an enclosed region adjacent to the surface 18 with the electrode 22 directly opposed to the electrode 16 and the electrodes 21 and 23 opposed to each other and at right angles to the electrodes 16 and 22. As indicated by the arrows, each of the elec¬ trodes is movable toward the melting region 10 as the end surfaces of the electrodes are melted. Prefer- ably, the four electrodes are oriented at 45° to the longitudinal axis of the hearth 13, as shown in Fig. 2, to assure adequate access to the surface of the pool of molten metal 15 from another gun in the refining area (not shown). In the illustrated embodiment, each of the addi¬ tional electrodes 21, 22, and 23 is guided on a corre¬ sponding conveyor toward the region adjacent to the electrode 16 so that all four electrodes are continu-

ously melted to supply material to the hearth 13 and substantially all of the solid material ejected by explosive vaporization from each of the adjacent sur¬ faces impinges upon the surface of one of the other electrodes, where it is melted by the energy beam and flows into the hearth with the other molten material. Any material which is not melted on an adjacent elec¬ trode face or which falls directly into the pool 15 of molten material is melted by the energy beam 12 as it passes between the adjacent electrode surfaces and applies energy to the surface of the molten metal in the pool 15.

If desired, instead of having four electrodes 16, 21, 22 and 23, all movable on conveyors toward the melting region 10, the furnace may be arranged so that only one or two of the electrodes are fed toward the melting zone and the other adjacent surfaces are main¬ tained stationary and only that material which accumu¬ lates on those surfaces is melted by the electron beam 12. With this arrangement, it is not necessary for the additional electrodes to have substantial length and the furnace structure is significantly simplified. While only four electrodes, all disposed in the same horizontal plane, are shown in the illustrated embodi- ment, it is also possible to provide more or fewer electrodes in a horizontal plane and to include fur¬ ther electrodes extending at an angle to a horizontal plane as long as the energy beam 12 has access to the adjacent surfaces of all of the electrodes to be melted and provision is made for molten material to flow from the electrodes into the hearth.

Although the invention has been described herein with reference to specific embodiments, many modifica¬ tions and variations therein will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, all such vari¬ ations and modifications are included within the in¬ tended scope of the invention.