Target Audience: Metallurgical Engineers, Melting Supervisors, QA/QC Engineers
1. Charge Material is Everything: Pre-treatment & Management
Core Concept: “Garbage In, Garbage Out.” The primary function of an induction furnace is melting, not refining; therefore, source control is non-negotiable.
- Classification & Management:
- Chemical Segregation: Strictly separate Carbon Steel, Low-alloy Steel, Stainless Steel, and Cast Iron returns. Trace amounts of Cr o Cu mixing into plain carbon steel can cause mechanical property failures (hal., reduced elongation).
- Size Configuration: Place small material at the bottom to protect the lining, heavy blocks in the middle, and fill gaps with smaller scrap. Packing Density directly affects coupling efficiency and melt rate.
- Cleanliness:
- Rust & Sand Removal: Heavy rust ( Fe2O3 · H2O) introduces significant Oxygen and Hydrogen, leading to increased slag and porosity.
- Degreasing: Cutting fluids and oil on machine chips are sources of Carbon and Sulfur pickup, and are primary culprits for smoke and Hydrogen porosity.
- Preheating & Drying:
- Safety: Eliminate moisture to prevent steam explosions.
- Energy Efficiency: Preheating to 300°C–500°C can significantly reduce electrical consumption.
2. Effective Deslagging: Metal Purity & Lining Protection
Core Concept: Slag is a “protective coat” for the melt but a “trash can” for inclusions. Improper handling makes it a “killer” of furnace linings.
- Selection of Slag Coagulants:
- Use Perlite or specialized slag removers. High-quality coagulants should expand and bind immediately upon contact, forming a crust that is easy to skim.
- Warning: Avoid fluxes with high Sodium (Na) content. While they fluidize the slag, they aggressively attack Acidic (Silica) linings.
- Timing of Deslagging:
- Post-Melt Down: Skim to remove the bulk of the dirty material once fully melted.
- Pre-Tap: Must skim before adding expensive ferroalloys to prevent them from being trapped in the slag and oxidized.
- “Slag Cover” Strategy: In specific processes, maintaining a very thin layer of slag can prevent the molten steel from aspirating gases (N, H), though this requires skilled operators.
- Lining Protection:
- Avoid mechanical impact on the furnace walls during manual skimming.
- Control Slag Basicity to prevent “Chemical Erosion.” Acidic linings suffer from basic slag (high CaO); Basic linings suffer from acidic slag (high SiO2).
3. Precise Temperature Control: The Dual Risks
Core Concept: Temperature is the lifeline. Unlike an Electric Arc Furnace (EAF), an Induction Furnace has limited refining capabilities; overheating usually causes more harm than good.
- Measurement Methods:
- Disposable Dip Thermocouple: The Gold Standard. Ensure the tip penetrates the slag layer and reaches the center of the melt (typically ~300mm below the surface).
- Infrared/Optical Pyrometers: Use only for trending. They are easily affected by fumes, slag cover, and emissivity changes, leading to data drift.
- Consequences of Improper Control:
- Overheating:
- Gas Pickup: Solubility of H2 at N2 increases exponentially with every 100°C rise.
- Lining Erosion:SiO2 + 2C → Si + 2CO (Crucible reduction by Carbon at high temps).
- Coarse Grains: Leads to reduced impact toughness in the final casting.
- Under-heating:
- Inclusion Retention: Stokes’ Law dictates that inclusions float slower in cooler, more viscous metal.
- Misruns/Cold Shuts: Poor mold filling capability.
- Overheating:
4. Metallurgical Reactions: Deoxidation & Alloying
Core Concept: Even in “dead melting,” chemical reactions occur. Electromagnetic stirring is a double-edged sword.
- Deoxidation Regimes:
- Precipitation Deoxidation: Must be done before tapping. Typical sequence: Weak to Strong (Mn → Si → Al).
- Final Deoxidation: Stream inoculation or addition of final deoxidizers (hal., Ca-Si, Rare Earths) during tapping to modify inclusion morphology.
- Alloying Strategy:
- Addition Sequence:
- Refractory elements (hal., Mo, Cr) should be added early.
- Oxidizable elements (hal., Ti, Al, B) should be added late, after good pre-deoxidation.
- Carbon Adjustment: Recarburizers (Graphite) should be added with the solid charge. Late additions have very poor recovery (<60%).
- Addition Sequence:
- Element Control:
- Silicon Pickup: At high temperatures, Carbon reduces the Silica lining, potentially causing unintended spikes in Si content during long holds.
- Mn/S Ratio: Maintain Mn/S > 10 to prevent hot tearing/shortness.
5. Troubleshooting: Reverse Engineering from Defects
Core Concept: The casting is the “Black Box” that records melting quality.
| Defect Type | Root Cause (Induction Furnace Operation) | Corrective Action |
| Gas Porosity | Wet/Oily charge; Tapping temp too high; Wet ladles/spouts; Insufficient Deoxidation. | Preheat charge; Limit max temp; Bake ladles thoroughly; Boost Al deoxidation. |
| Slag Inclusions | Poor skimming; Slag entrainment during tap; Severe lining erosion; Insufficient settling time. | Use effective coagulants; Use teapot ladles or slag dams; Repair lining; Allow 2-5 min settling after tap. |
| Off-Chemistry | Weighing errors; Wrong recovery estimates; Mixed scrap; Poor sampling representation. | Calibrate scales; Build recovery database per grade; Standardize spectral sampling. |
| Cracks | High S, P content; Trace element buildup from excessive returns. | Control scrap source; Limit ratio of returns (typically <40%). |







