Filtration and Degassing in HPDC: Special Considerations

High-pressure die casting (HPDC) is one of the fastest and most efficient metal casting processes in existence. It produces millions of aluminum components every day—engine blocks, transmission housings, structural parts, and more.

But speed comes with unique challenges. In HPDC, molten metal is injected into a steel die at high velocity and pressure. The entire shot takes milliseconds. There’s no time for inclusions to float out. There’s no runner system to place a traditional filter. And turbulence is inevitable.

This means the rules for filtration and degassing in HPDC are different from sand casting or gravity casting. You can’t fix melt quality issues in the die. You have to fix them before the metal enters the shot sleeve.

This guide explains the special considerations for filtration and degassing in HPDC—and how to adapt your approach to this demanding process.

High-Pressure Die Casting

Why HPDC Is Different

The HPDC Process in Brief

In HPDC, molten metal is:

  1. Ladled into a shot sleeve (a horizontal or vertical cylinder)

  2. Plunged by a hydraulic piston into the die cavity

  3. Injected at high velocity (typically 30-100 m/s) and high pressure (up to 2,000 bar)

  4. Solidified rapidly under pressure

The entire cycle—from ladle to solidified part—can take as little as 10-30 seconds.

Why This Creates Unique Challenges

Factor Challenge for Filtration Challenge for Degassing
High injection speed No time for metal to pass through a filter in the runner No time for bubbles to rise and escape
Turbulence Oxide formation occurs during filling Entrapped gas is inevitable
No gating system Traditional runner filters can’t be placed
High pressure Filters must withstand extreme mechanical stress Pressure affects gas solubility
Rapid solidification Any remaining gas gets trapped in the casting

The Bottom Line

In HPDC, melt preparation is everything. If your metal isn’t clean and degassed before it enters the shot sleeve, you’ve already lost.

Degassing for HPDC — Special Considerations

The Hydrogen Problem in HPDC

Hydrogen porosity is a major defect in HPDC aluminum castings. When molten aluminum absorbs hydrogen (from moisture in the atmosphere, charge materials, or lubricants), the gas comes out of solution during solidification, forming tiny pores that:

Consequence Impact
Reduced mechanical properties Lower tensile strength, ductility, fatigue life
Surface blisters Cosmetic defects, especially after heat treatment
Leakage Failure in pressure-tight components
Machining problems Porous surfaces, poor finish

Degassing Methods for HPDC

Method How It Works Suitability for HPDC
Rotary degassing Graphite rotor injects inert gas into melt, breaking it into fine bubbles Best practice — most effective
Lance degassing Simple tube injects gas from a single point Less efficient; acceptable for small melts
Fluxing Chemical tablets or powders react with melt Supplementary; not a primary method
Vacuum degassing Melt is exposed to vacuum Not common in HPDC

Why Rotary Degassing Is Preferred for HPDC

Advantage Why It Matters for HPDC
Fine bubble size More surface area for hydrogen diffusion; faster degassing
Full melt circulation Treats entire melt, not just local area
Predictable results Consistent hydrogen reduction shot after shot
Inclusion removal Also floats out oxides

Recommended Practice

For HPDC, degassing should be performed in the holding furnace or a dedicated degassing station:

Parameter Typical Range
Gas type Argon or nitrogen (>99.9% purity)
Flow rate 10-30 L/min (depends on melt size)
Rotor speed 200-500 RPM
Duration 5-20 minutes (depending on melt volume)
Frequency Every 2-4 hours, or continuously

Target Hydrogen Levels for HPDC

Application Target H₂ Level
General castings <0.15 ml/100g Al
Structural components <0.12 ml/100g Al
Pressure-tight castings <0.10 ml/100g Al
Aerospace / high-integrity <0.08 ml/100g Al

Filtration in HPDC — Where Can You Put a Filter?

The Challenge

Traditional ceramic foam filters are designed to be placed in a runner system, where metal flows through them under gravity or low pressure. HPDC has no runner system—metal is injected directly from the shot sleeve into the die.

Available Options

Filtration Method How It Works Effectiveness
In-line filtration in launder Filter placed in the launder between furnace and shot sleeve Most common — catches inclusions before metal enters shot sleeve
Filter in shot sleeve Custom filter placed in the shot sleeve before the plunger Possible but challenging; must withstand plunger force
Filter in die (gate or runner) Filter integrated into the die at the gate or runner Limited application; die modifications required
No filter — rely on degassing only No filtration; clean melt is the only defense Risky for critical applications

Recommended Approach: In-Line Filtration

The most practical and effective method for HPDC is to place a ceramic foam filter in the launder system that feeds the shot sleeve.

How it works:

  1. Metal flows from the holding furnace through a launder

  2. A ceramic foam filter is placed in the launder

  3. Metal passes through the filter before entering the shot sleeve

  4. Clean, filtered metal is then injected into the die

Advantages:

  • Catches inclusions before they enter the shot sleeve

  • No modification to the die or shot sleeve

  • Filter can be easily changed during production

  • Works with existing launder systems

Filter Selection for In-Line Filtration

Parameter Recommendation
Material Alumina (for aluminum alloys)
PPI 20-30 PPI (balance of flow and filtration)
Size Match to launder cross-section; ensure full coverage
Placement Close to the shot sleeve inlet to minimize reoxidation

Oxide Control — The Hidden Challenge

Why Oxides Are a Bigger Problem in HPDC

In HPDC, the high-velocity injection creates turbulence that can form oxide films. These oxide films:

Problem Consequence
Fold into the casting Become internal defects (cold shuts, oxide bifilms)
Reduce mechanical properties Act as crack initiation sites
Appear after heat treatment Surface blisters from entrapped gas
Are hard to detect May not show up on X-ray

How to Minimize Oxide Formation

Strategy Implementation
Clean melt before injection Filtration + degassing in the launder
Smooth shot sleeve filling Reduce turbulence during ladling
Optimize injection parameters Avoid excessive velocity at the gate
Use melt treatment Grain refinement and modification

The Role of Filtration in Oxide Removal

Ceramic foam filters are highly effective at removing oxide films from molten aluminum. The filter’s tortuous path captures oxide particles that would otherwise flow into the shot sleeve and become defects in the casting.

Integration — Putting It All Together

Complete Melt Preparation System for HPDC

Holding Furnace
      │
      ▼
[Optional: Rotary Degassing] ───► Clean, hydrogen-free melt
      │
      ▼
   Launder
      │
      ▼
[In-Line Ceramic Foam Filter] ───► Inclusion-free melt
      │
      ▼
  Shot Sleeve
      │
      ▼
      Die

Best Practice Sequence

Step Action Frequency
1 Degas holding furnace with rotary degasser Every 2-4 hours or continuously
2 Monitor hydrogen level (Alscan, reduced pressure test) Every shift
3 Filter melt through in-line ceramic foam filter Every shot
4 Replace filter when flow rate drops As needed (typically every shift)
5 Verify casting quality Ongoing

Common Questions

Q1: Can I use a ceramic foam filter inside the shot sleeve?

A: It’s possible but challenging. The filter must withstand the plunger force and high injection pressure. Most HPDC foundries prefer in-line filtration in the launder.

Q2: Do I need both degassing and filtration for HPDC?

A: Yes. Degassing removes dissolved hydrogen; filtration removes solid inclusions (oxides, carbides, etc.). They address different defects and both are important for high-quality HPDC castings.

Q3: How often should I change my in-line filter?

A: Depends on melt cleanliness and production volume. Typical is every shift or when flow rate drops noticeably. Some foundries change filters every 8-12 hours.

Q4: What’s the best way to monitor hydrogen levels in HPDC?

A: Reduced pressure test (RPT) is common and cost-effective. For real-time monitoring, instruments like Alscan (immersion probe) provide immediate readings.

Q5: Can I use the same degassing rotor for different alloys?

A: Yes, but clean thoroughly between alloy changes to avoid cross-contamination. For HPDC producing multiple alloys, dedicated rotors per alloy are recommended.

Q6: What happens if I skip filtration in HPDC?

A: You rely entirely on melt cleanliness from the furnace. Inclusions that reach the shot sleeve will be injected into the casting, causing defects, scrap, and potential field failures.

Conclusion

HPDC presents unique challenges for filtration and degassing:

Challenge Solution
No runner system for filters In-line filtration in the launder
High turbulence, oxide formation Filtration to remove oxides before injection
Hydrogen porosity Rotary degassing to target low H₂ levels
Fast cycle times Consistent, repeatable melt preparation

The key principle: Fix the melt before it reaches the shot sleeve.

  • Degas to remove hydrogen

  • Filter to remove inclusions

  • Monitor to verify quality

When all three work together, you get high-quality HPDC castings with fewer defects, lower scrap, and consistent mechanical properties.

At SF-Foundry, we supply ceramic foam filters suitable for in-line filtration in HPDC launders, as well as rotary degassing systems and replacement rotors.

Contact us:

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