Current developments on the coupled thermomechanical computational modeling of metal casting processes

Current developments on the coupled thermomechanical computational modeling of metal casting processes

Carlos Agelet De Saracibar, Michele Chiumenti, Miguel Cervera

International Center for Numerical Methods in Engineering (CIMNE), Barcelona, Spain.
ETS Ingenieros de Caminos, Canales y Puertos, Universidad Politécnica de Cataluna, Barcelona, Spain.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7494/cmms.2006.1.0106

Abstract:

In this paper, current developments on the coupled thermomechanical computational simulation of metal casting processes are presented A thermodynamically consistent constitutive material model is derived from a thermoviscoplastic free energy function. A continuous transition between the initial fluid-like and the final solid-like is modeled by considering a J2 thermoviscoplastic model. Thus, an thermoelastoviscoplastic model, suitable for the solid-like phase, degenerates into a pure thermoviscous model, suitable for the liquid-like phase, according to the evolution of the solid fraction function. A thermomechanical contact model, taking into account the insulated effects of the air-gap due to thermal shrinkage of the part during solidification and cooling, is introduced. A fractional step method, arising from an operator split of the governing differential equations, is considered to solve the coupled problem using a staggered scheme. Within a finite element setting, using low-order interpolation elements, a multiscale stabilization technique is introduced as a convenient framework to overcome the Babuska-Brezzi condition and avoid volumetric locking and pressure instabilities arising in incompressible or quasi-incompressible problems. Computational simulation of industrial castings show the good performance of the model.

Cite as:

Agelet De Saracibar, C., Chiumenti, M., Cervera, M. (2006). Current developments on the coupled thermomechanical computational modeling of metal casting processes. Computer Methods in Materials Science, 6(1), 15 – 25. https://doi.org/10.7494/cmms.2006.1.0106

Article (PDF):

Keywords:

Coupled, Thermomechanical, Casting, Multiphysics, Finite elements

References: