Accurate thermal analysis of steel solidification and heat transfer in the continuous casting mold is essential for understanding and controlling solidification, shell thickness uniformity, interfacial gap phenomena, and defects such as cracks and breakouts. This study investigates heat transfer in a funnel mold slab caster using the in-house thermal model, Con1D. A new methodology is introduced to predict the slag layer roughness, and its effect on interface resistance. To account for the multidimensional thermal behavior near water channels and thermocouples, finite-element models are developed in Abaqus to calibrate Con1D to match three-dimensional calculations of mold heat transfer. After calibration to match plant measurements for one set of casting conditions, Con1D predictions are validated with plant measurements at different casting speeds and mold plate thicknesses. Key outputs analyzed include the heat flux profile, mold and shell temperatures, shell thickness, shell shrinkage, and interfacial parameters such as slag layer thickness. Increasing casting speed causes higher heat flux, higher shell surface and mold temperatures, and decreased shell and slag layer thicknesses. Decreasing mold plate thickness increases heat flux slightly due to reduced thermal resistance of both the mold and interfacial gap. The modeling approach presented here is a powerful methodology to gain quantitative fundamental understanding of mold heat transfer in continuous casting, especially including phenomena in the interfacial gap.
Jebellat et al. (Thu,) studied this question.