Thermal Analysis Cups (Sampling Cups): What Foundries Need to Know

If you’ve been reading our blog, you’re already familiar with ceramic foam filters and how they help clean molten metal before it enters the mold. But there’s another important consumable in modern foundries that deserves attention: thermal analysis cups (also called sampling cups or C.E. cups).

You may have seen them in your quality control lab or on the foundry floor. But what exactly do they do? And why do they matter for your casting quality?

This guide explains what thermal analysis cups are, how they work, and why they’re essential for consistent casting results.

What Is a Thermal Analysis Cup?

A thermal analysis cup is a small, disposable container made from refractory material (typically ceramic or silica sand with a binder) used to take a sample of molten metal for quality analysis.

The cup holds a sample of molten metal—usually iron or aluminum—while a thermocouple inserted into the cup measures the cooling curve as the metal solidifies.

application of thermal analysis carbon cup

Basic Components

Component Function
Cup body Refractory material (ceramic, silica sand, etc.) that holds the molten metal sample
Thermocouple Temperature sensor (typically Type K or Type R) inserted into the cup
Connection wires Connect to the thermal analysis instrument (C.E. meter)
Sample cavity Precision-molded interior shape that ensures consistent cooling

Why Thermal Analysis Matters

When you cast metal, the final properties depend heavily on the metal’s composition and how it solidifies. Thermal analysis gives you real-time information about your melt:

Information Provided What It Tells You
Carbon Equivalent (CE) The combined effect of carbon and silicon on solidification
Carbon content Critical for gray and ductile iron properties
Silicon content Affects graphite formation and matrix structure
Liquidus temperature Where solidification begins
Eutectic temperature Where graphite forms in cast iron
Cooling curve shape Indicates nodularization quality in ductile iron

In short: Without accurate thermal analysis, you’re pouring blind.

How It Works

Step 1: Sample Collection

A small amount of molten metal is taken from the ladle or furnace and poured into the sampling cup.

Step 2: Temperature Measurement

A thermocouple inserted into the cup continuously measures the temperature as the metal cools and solidifies.

Step 3: Cooling Curve Analysis

The thermal analysis instrument (C.E. meter) plots the cooling curve and identifies key phase changes:

  • Liquidus arrest — where primary phase (austenite or graphite) begins to form

  • Eutectic arrest — where the remaining liquid solidifies

  • Solidus — where solidification completes

Step 4: Composition Calculation

Based on the arrest temperatures, the instrument calculates carbon content, silicon content, and carbon equivalent value.

Types of Thermal Analysis Cups

Standard Cups for Gray Iron

Feature Details
Application Gray iron casting
What it measures Carbon equivalent, carbon, silicon, liquidus temperature
Typical shape Cylindrical with thermocouple at bottom or side
Additives Sometimes includes tellurium to stabilize carbide formation
sf square carbon cupround carbon cup for molten iron

Cup Design Matters

The design of the sampling cup directly affects the accuracy of your results.

Key Design Factors

Factor Why It Matters
Wall thickness Affects cooling rate; inconsistent thickness gives inconsistent results
Cup geometry Controls how heat dissipates; influences the shape of the cooling curve
Thermocouple placement Must be precisely positioned for consistent temperature readings
Material composition Affects how quickly heat is transferred from the metal to the cup wall

Check Your Instrument

Make sure the cup you choose is compatible with your thermal analysis instrument (C.E. meter). Most manufacturers have specific cup models for specific instruments.

Proper Use and Handling

Storage

Requirement Why
Dry environment Moisture in the cup can cause gas defects in the sample
Room temperature Extreme temperatures can affect the thermocouple or binder
Protected from damage Cracks in the cup can cause leaks or inaccurate readings

Before Pouring

  1. Inspect the cup for cracks or damage

  2. Check that the thermocouple is properly seated

  3. Ensure connection wires are clean and secure

During Pouring

  1. Fill the cup in one smooth pour

  2. Avoid overfilling or splashing

  3. Do not move the cup until the sample has fully solidified

After Testing

  • Dispose of the used cup properly

  • Do not reuse—cups are single-use consumables

Interpreting Results

While detailed interpretation requires training, here are basic guidelines:

Gray Iron

Observation Indication
High CE (>4.3) Potential graphite flotation
Low CE (<3.8) May require more carbon/silicon addition
Liquidus temperature too high Low carbon content

Ductile Iron

Observation Indication
Cooling curve shape Nodularity quality (specific shape analysis)
Eutectic undercooling Affects shrinkage tendency

Common Questions

Q1: What’s the difference between a sampling cup and a filter?

A: They serve completely different purposes:

  • Sampling cup = quality control tool. It tests a small sample to verify your melt is correct.

  • Filter = production tool. It cleans the metal before it enters every casting.

You use a sampling cup before pouring to confirm your melt is right. Then you use filters during pouring to keep it clean.

Q2: How often should I use thermal analysis?

A: For consistent production, sample every ladle or at regular intervals. For jobbing foundries, sample each heat or when alloy additions are made.

Q3: Can I reuse a sampling cup?

A: No. Cups are single-use. The sample solidifies in the cup, and removing it would damage the cup and thermocouple.

Q4: What’s tellurium, and why is it sometimes added to cups?

A: Tellurium is added to some cups to stabilize the formation of cementite (white iron structure) during cooling, making it easier to interpret the cooling curve and calculate carbon content accurately.

Q5: How do I know if my cup results are accurate?

A: Consistency is key. If your results vary significantly from batch to batch, check:

  • Are you using cups from the same manufacturer?

  • Are cups stored properly?

  • Is your pouring technique consistent?

  • Is your instrument calibrated?

Summary

Aspect Key Point
What it is Disposable cup with thermocouple for testing molten metal quality
What it measures Carbon equivalent, carbon, silicon, cooling curve
Why it matters Ensures melt composition is correct before pouring
Key factor Consistent cup quality gives consistent results
Quality control tool Essential for modern foundry operations

Where to Get Thermal Analysis Cups

At SF-Foundry, we supply a complete range of foundry consumables. Our thermal analysis cups are manufactured with precision-molded geometries and consistent wall thickness to ensure reliable, repeatable results.

Related Products You May Need

Thermal analysis is just one part of foundry quality control. We also supply:

Product Purpose
Ceramic foam filters Remove inclusions from molten metal
Honeycomb filters Cost-effective filtration for iron and aluminum
Fiberglass mesh filters Economical filtration for smaller castings
Riser sleeves Improve feeding efficiency and casting yield
Pouring cups / Sprue cups Control metal flow into the mold
Ceramic sampling spoons Collect molten metal samples for analysis
Thermocouples Temperature measurement for furnaces and ladles

Whatever your foundry needs—from melt control to filtration to feeding—we’re here to help.

Need Help?

If you have questions about thermal analysis cups, filters, or any other foundry consumables, our technical team is ready to assist.

Contact us:

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