Gold jewellery investment casting
Investment casting is in all probability the most important production technique for the manufacture of gold jewellery. However, few attempts have been made to investigate systematically the fundamental principles of the process as applied for this purpose, and very few publications describing such researches have appeared. The review by L. B. Hunt of the history of the lost wax casting process in the preceding pages is an appropriate background against which to report briefly on some research results highlighted at the 'Colloquium on Investment Casting of Gold Jewellery Alloys' held recently at Schwbisch Gmnd, in the Federal Republic of Germany. This meeting was arranged to mark the end of the first year of a research project on investment casting of gold jewellery alloys, which was commissioned by the International Gold Corporation Limited at the Forschungsinstitut fr Edelmetalle und Metallchemie (F.E.M.). A total of fifteen papers were presented. The research results were introduced by Ch.J. Raub and D. Ott of the F.E.M., and current casting practice was the topic of a number of excellent presentations by speakers from all walks of industry.
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An investigation of the properties of investment
slurries, and of set and fired investments, commenced
with the assessment of procedures suitable for
measuring those properties of gypsum-bound
investment materials which influence the quality of the
castings. Ott reported that the most important
characteristics of the slurry are its viscosity, and its
working and setting times. The viscosity of an
investment slurry is a complex parameter which depends
not only on the temperature, but also on the
`mechanical stress' and age of the mix at the moment
of measurement. A rotation viscometer was used to
measure the viscosity. The decrease of the viscosity of
a slurry with increasing rate of shear might explain
why vibration of the slurry during the investment of
the wax pattern prolongs the working time and
renders vacuum degassing more effective. A Vicat
apparatus (DIN Standard 1164/5) fitted with a cylinder
or needle was used to determine the working and
setting times. The results were found to be in good
agreement with the `gloss-off' point (a visual
assessment of the setting of the investment) and with the
measured change of viscosity with time.
The working time of the slurry is most significantly
affected by the mixing ratio (powder/water) and by
the quality of the water. Thus, with one commercial
investment, a change from distilled water and a ratio
of 100/35 to tap-water and a ratio of 100/40 increases
the working time by nearly 100 per cent from 9.5 to
17.5 minutes. These effects emphasize the need for
jewellery manufacturers to determine regularly the
working properties of their raw materials under
workshop conditions. Initial attempts at quantifying
the strength and permeability of fired investments
indicate that meaningful measurements can be obtained
at the actual casting temperatures only; the formation
during cooling of microcracks in the investment was
found to cause variable results at room temperature.
The temperature gradients developing within a flask
during cooling in air were also determined for
example, in the sprue at the centre of a flask the initial
rate of cooling from a temperature of 740C was
about 4C/minute, whereas at the wall the rate was
10C /minute.
The Quality of Castings
The faithful reproduction of the surface of the
pattern and the soundness of the metal are important
criteria in determining the quality of a casting. Raub
emphasized the need for standard patterns and tests to
evaluate these criteria. Four basic patterns are now
being used for the research project. A grid (developed
by the dental industry), a stepped wedge with a highly
polished surface, the sound track of a long-playing
record and a dumb-bell-shaped pattern are used to
assess mould cavity filling, dimensional accuracy,
surface roughness and reproduction, and soundness of
the metal. Gold castings of these patterns have been
examined by a variety of techniques. The surface
condition is best recorded using the Perthometer (a
surface profile measuring device) or photomicrographs,
and metallographic methods and scanning electron
microscopy are used for structure analysis and to
reveal internal flaws. Results to date have shown that
the surface roughness of the castings increases
somewhat with the thickness of the pattern,
particularly when the casting temperature is too high,
and that cavity filling, surface smoothness and
Coarse dendritie morphology of the east metal, seen here, can
greatly affect surface roughness. Casting conditions should
therefore be such as to give fine-grained structures
reproduction of the patterns at the tip of the casting
tree are measurably better than those near the
entrance to the flask. Surface finish has also been related
to the rate of solidification of the melt, which in turn
depends upon the difference between the melt and
mould temperatures and upon the surface/
volume ratio of the pattern. The effects of any
contaminants in the alloys on quality are being
investigated using energy dispersive x-rays, as well as
atomic absorption spectrometry; semi-quantitative
results are being obtained spectrographically. A
sound basis has thus been established for the
quantitative assessment of the quality of castings upon
which the future research can be built.
Static Casting Processes
The factors which influence most strongly the
quality of castings produced by static methods were
screened as a prelude to a more intensive
investigation. Commercial casting machines were modified to
allow melting and pouring in air, under a protective
atmosphere (98 nitrogen/2 per cent hydrogen) and in
vacuum, with provision for the application of an
overpressure to the molten metal in the mould. Medium
frequency induction heating was used throughout.
Ott, in outlining the results which had been obtained
to date for a common 18 carat yellow gold alloy
(75 gold/16 silver/9 copper weight per cent, with a
melting range of 895 to 920C), stressed that in a
process such as investment casting the effects of one
variable should never be considered in isolation from
those of other factors. Temperature has a major
bearing on casting quality for example, it was
found that the useable range of melt temperatures for
the alloy investigated is between 980 and 1100C,
with flask temperatures between 450 and 700C.
Generally, higher flask temperatures require lower
melt temperatures and vice versa. The effect of
pressure appears to be complex and both the absolute
pressure during casting and the difference between
the pressure on the base of the sprue and that on the
outside of the mould affect the quality of the casting.
Thus, it has been found that the minimum
differential in pressure required for effective filling of the
patterns decreases with the absolute pressure. The
nature of the atmosphere over the melt also seems to
play a role. W (...truncated)