VIRTUAL PROTOTYPING ANALYTICS

Predict & Eliminate
Casting Defects

A comprehensive survey of casting flaws. Discover how advanced computational simulation transforms trial-and-error into exact science.

The High Cost of Unpredicted Flaws

In modern foundry operations, physical prototyping is prohibitively expensive. Casting defects—ranging from micro-porosity to massive hot tears—compromise structural integrity and lead to high scrap rates. This interactive report details the phenomena behind common defects and demonstrates how PoligonSoft algorithms compute solid fractions, track thermal gradients, and execute stress analyses to highlight tear-prone regions before a single drop of metal is poured.

Interactive Defect Matrix

Select a defect category to analyze its causes, thermodynamic mechanics, and see how computational simulation identifies it within the virtual mold.

Simulation Output

Gating Entry Mold Extremity
°C
Current Temp
750°C
System Ready. Awaiting execution.

The PoligonSoft Impact

Analyzing defect reduction rates across 500 casting cycles in a heavy industrial foundry utilizing "predict and eliminate" virtual prototyping.

Transitioning from Trial-and-Error

Prior to simulation, the foundry relied on historical heuristics, resulting in an 18% scrap rate for complex geometries.

By integrating PoligonSoft's Hooke solver and thermal analysis, engineers executed 14 design iterations in 48 hours virtually, achieving massive ROI.

Porosity Eradicated

Optimized riser design via Niyama criterion.

Time to Market

Decreased from 6 weeks to 8 days.

Defect Frequency Reduction Metrics

Documentation

Comprehensive Metallurgical Reference

An exhaustive exploration of thermophysical principles underlying defects and the mathematical models utilized by PoligonSoft.

1. Thermodynamics of Porosity: Gas Entrapment and Shrinkage

Porosity is arguably the most insidious of casting defects, manifesting as voids that drastically reduce fatigue life and tensile strength. It is categorized into two distinct phenomena.

1.1 Gas Porosity Precipitation

Gas porosity occurs when gases are trapped within the solidifying metal. According to Sievert's Law, solubility is proportional to the square root of partial pressure. As temperature drops, solubility decreases precipitously. Simulation software like PoligonSoft tracks velocity vectors during filling. By analyzing Weber and Reynolds numbers, the software predicts regions of high turbulence where mechanical air entrainment is highly probable.

1.2 Shrinkage Cavities

Alloys undergo volumetric contraction transitioning from liquid to solid. If isolated liquid regions (hot spots) are encapsulated before freezing, the contraction has no feed metal, creating a vacuum. PoligonSoft utilizes finite element analysis (FEA) to solve Fourier heat conduction equations. By computing the "solid fraction" and employing the Niyama criterion, simulation pinpoints where feeding pathways will pinch off.

Simulation Focus: Solid Fraction

A critical threshold (0.3 - 0.7 solid fraction) dictates the "coherency point" where dendrites interlock and mass feeding ceases. Areas below this threshold cut off from risers are flagged as defective.

Advanced Mathematical Models

Computational prediction mechanics matrix indicators.