The Future of Foundry Operations

Virtualize the Pour.
Perfect the Cast.

Casting simulation allows engineers to virtualize the entire foundry process, modeling fluid flow and solidification to predict outcomes and eliminate costly trial-and-error before the first mold is ever cut.

Demystifying the Virtual Foundry

Understanding the transition from physical trial-and-error to digital precision.

Modeling Reality

At its core, casting simulation is the use of advanced computational algorithms—primarily the Finite Element Method (FEM) or Finite Volume Method (FVM)—to mathematically replicate the physical phenomena that occur during metalcasting. It is the digital twin of the foundry floor.

The process models three critical phases: the pouring (hydrodynamics of molten metal filling the cavity), the cooling (thermodynamics of heat transferring to the mold and environment), and the solidification (phase change and resulting mechanical stresses).

"Engineers perform the entire simulation process before making every mold. It’s far less expensive and much quicker than fixing a mold after it’s cut."

Batesville Products Guide

The Digital Workflow

1. CAD Geometry Import

Defining the 3D model of the part, gating, and risers.

2. Mesh Generation

Discretizing the geometry into millions of finite elements for calculation.

3. Boundary Conditions & Solvers

Applying material properties, temperatures, and running physics solvers.

The Depth of Computational Physics in Casting

To truly grasp the magnitude of casting simulation, one must understand the sheer complexity of the physical event it attempts to model. When molten metal, often at temperatures exceeding 700°C for aluminum or 1500°C for steel, is poured into a mold, it triggers a cascade of violently rapid physical and chemical reactions. This is not a simple fluid dynamics problem; it is a multiphysics phenomenon.

First, we face Navier-Stokes equations governing the turbulent flow of the liquid metal. The metal does not flow smoothly; it splashes, folds over on itself, and entraps air. If the gating system (the plumbing of the mold) is poorly designed, the velocity of the metal might exceed critical thresholds, leading to mold erosion or severe oxide film entrainment. Simulation software tracks the Free Surface of the fluid precisely to identify where air pockets might be trapped, preventing the defect known as misruns or gas porosity.

Simultaneously, the Fourier equations of heat conduction must be solved. The moment metal touches the mold, intense heat transfer begins. The mold absorbs heat, expanding, while the metal loses heat, contracting. The rate of cooling dictates the metallurgical microstructure of the final part. A faster cooling rate might yield finer grain structures and higher tensile strength, while slow cooling might lead to coarse grains. Furthermore, alloys do not freeze at a single temperature but over a range (between the liquidus and solidus lines). During this "mushy zone" phase, the metal is neither fully liquid nor fully solid. It is a dense slurry where complex dendritic networks form.

As the dendritic networks interlock, they cut off channels for remaining liquid metal to flow into areas that are shrinking as they solidify. This is the primary cause of shrinkage porosity. Simulation software calculates the thermal gradients and identifies "hot spots"—isolated regions of liquid metal that solidify last. Without proper feeding (using risers), these hot spots will inevitably result in voids. By visualizing this on a computer screen, foundry engineers can move risers, add chills (cooling elements), or redesign the geometry to ensure directional solidification towards the feeding mechanisms.

Finally, we have the solid mechanics phase. As the part continues to cool to room temperature, thermal contraction is resisted by the rigid mold (in sand or investment casting) or the steel dies (in die casting). This resistance builds up immense internal residual stresses. If these stresses exceed the yield strength or ultimate tensile strength of the alloy at that specific temperature, the casting will warp (distort) or catastrophically tear (hot tearing or cold cracking). A comprehensive tool like PoligonSoft calculates these stress vectors, allowing engineers to modify die designs, alter ejection timing, or adjust alloy compositions to relieve these forces.

The Business Case: Why We Simulate

Drawing back the curtain on hidden interactions saves millions on the foundry floor.

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Revealing Hidden Interactions

As noted by Batesville Products, "Metalcasting is a simultaneous interaction between the alloy, mold and process parameters... simulation tools draw back the curtain."

You cannot look inside a steel die while aluminum is injected at 40 meters per second. Sensors can only tell you so much. Simulation provides X-ray vision, allowing you to see the invisible forces dictating product quality.

Zero Trial-and-Error Scrap

Eliminate the need to pour test molds that end up in the remelt furnace.

Accelerated Time-to-Market

Go from CAD design to approved first article in weeks, not months.

Optimized Yield

Design smaller gating and risers, pouring less metal per part while maintaining quality.

Development Cost & Time Comparison

Traditional Foundry vs. Simulation-Driven Process

Tool Spotlight: PoligonSoft

An advanced, all-in-one FEM (Finite Element Method) toolkit engineered for uncompromising precision across every phase of the casting lifecycle.

Mastering the Pour

The filling phase is the most chaotic moment in metalcasting. PoligonSoft's hydrodynamic solver utilizes advanced Navier-Stokes computations to track the free surface of the liquid metal in real-time.

Velocity Vectors: Identifies areas where high velocity causes mold erosion or sand wash.
Air Entrapment: Predicts exactly where air bubbles are likely to be trapped, forming gas porosity.
Temperature Loss: Calculates heat loss during filling to predict premature freezing (misruns).

HYDRODYNAMIC VISUALIZATION SIMULATION

Controlling Solidification

Once the mold is full, thermodynamics take over. The Thermal solver in PoligonSoft tracks the complex heat exchange between the alloy, the mold, cores, and the ambient environment.

Niyama Criterion: Employs advanced thermal gradient calculations to pinpoint microscopic shrinkage porosity.
Hot Spot Detection: Visualizes isolated pools of liquid metal that solidify last, requiring riser placement.
Cooling Channel Optimization: In die casting, simulates water/oil lines to balance die temperatures.
[ 1520°C → 600°C ]

Predicting Structural Integrity

As metal cools, it shrinks. When constrained by a rigid mold, immense internal forces build up. The Stress solver predicts the mechanical outcome of thermal contraction.

Warpage Prediction: Calculates final dimensional distortion, allowing for pre-compensation in the CAD model geometry.
Hot Tearing: Identifies critical stress concentrations at high temperatures where the alloy is weak and prone to tearing.
Residual Stresses: Maps forces that remain locked inside the part, which can affect machining and lifecycle performance.
High Stress Concentration

Trusted Across Heavy Industries

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Automotive
Engine blocks, structural nodes
Aerospace
Turbine blades, housing
Heavy Machinery
Mining parts, pump casings
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Energy Sector
Valves, wind turbine hubs

Interactive Defect Analyzer

Software is designed to "predict and eliminate porosity, shrinkage, misruns, cracks, and warpage." Select a defect below to see how it's solved.

Up Next

Tutorial Series Roadmap

What to expect in the upcoming video modules on casting simulation mastery.

Part 1: Basic Processes

Establishing the foundation. We will cover the import of CAD models, setting up basic meshing parameters, and defining standard alloys from the database.

  • • Geometry preparation & repair
  • • Material database selection
  • • Setting initial boundary conditions

Part 2: Defect Analysis

Running the hydrodynamic and thermal solvers. Learning how to read the visual output data to pinpoint exact locations of porosity and shrinkage.

  • • Interpreting Niyama Criterion maps
  • • Tracking fluid particle traces
  • • Identifying isolated thermal centers

Part 3: PoligonSoft Demo

A live, over-the-shoulder walkthrough of a complete project in PoligonSoft. From blank screen to fully simulated steel casting.

  • • UI Navigation & workflow
  • • Running the Stress Solver
  • • Exporting simulation reports

Part 4: Advanced Cases

Tackling complex geometries, multi-component assemblies, investment casting shells, and high-pressure die casting (HPDC) optimizations.

  • • Cyclic mold heating in HPDC
  • • Radiation view factors in investment casting
  • • Microstructure prediction algorithms