Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part A The Fundamentals of MHD
- Part B Applications in Engineering and Metallurgy
- Introduction: An Overview of Metallurgical Applications
- 8 Magnetic Stirring Using Rotating Fields
- 9 Magnetic Damping Using Static Fields
- 10 Axisymmetric Flows Driven by the Injection of Current
- 11 MHD Instabilities in Reduction Cells
- 12 High-Frequency Fields: Magnetic Levitation and Induction Heating
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
8 - Magnetic Stirring Using Rotating Fields
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Part A The Fundamentals of MHD
- Part B Applications in Engineering and Metallurgy
- Introduction: An Overview of Metallurgical Applications
- 8 Magnetic Stirring Using Rotating Fields
- 9 Magnetic Damping Using Static Fields
- 10 Axisymmetric Flows Driven by the Injection of Current
- 11 MHD Instabilities in Reduction Cells
- 12 High-Frequency Fields: Magnetic Levitation and Induction Heating
- Appendices
- Bibliography
- Subject Index
Summary
Liquid metals freeze in much the same way as water. First, snowflake-like crystals form, and as these multiply and grow a solid emerges. However, this solid can be far from homogeneous. Just as a chef preparing icecream has to beat and stir the partially solidified cream to break up the crystals and release any trapped gas, so many steelmakers have to stir partially solidified ingots to ensure a fine-grained, homogeneous product. The preferred method of stirring is electromagnetic, and has been dubbed the ‘electromagnetic teaspoon’. We shall describe this process shortly.
First, however, it is necessary to say a little about commercial casting processes.
Casting, Stirring and Metallurgy
It will emerge from dark and gloomy caverns, casting all human races into great anxiety, peril and death. It will take away the lives of many; with this men will torment each other with many artifices, traductions and treasons. O monstrous creature, how much better it would be if you were to return to hell
(Leonardo da Vinci on the extraction and casting of metals)
Man has been casting metals for quite some time. Iron blades, perhaps 5000 years old, have been found in Egyptian pyramids, and by 1000 BC we find Homer mentioning the working and hardening of steel blades. Until relatively recently, all metal was cast by a batch process involving pouring the melt into closed moulds. However, today the bulk of aluminium and steel is cast in a continuous fashion, as indicated in Figure 8.1.
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- An Introduction to Magnetohydrodynamics , pp. 285 - 300Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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