Abstract

The replication casting process is used for manufacturing open-pore aluminum foams with advanced performances, such as stability and repeatability of foam structure with porosity over 60%. A simple foam structure model based on the interaction between sodium chloride solid particles poorly wetted by melted aluminum, which leads to the formation of air pockets (or "air collars"), is proposed for the permeability of porous material. The equation for the minimum pore radius of replicated aluminum foam is derived. According to the proposed model, the main assumption of the permeability model consists in a concentration of flow resistance in a circular aperture of radius rmin. The permeability of aluminum open-pore foams is measured using transformer oil as the fluid, changing the fractions of initial sodium chloride. Measured values of minimum pore size are close to theoretically predicted ones regardless of the particle shape. The expression for the permeability of replicated aluminum foam derived on the basis of the "bottleneck" model of porous media agrees well with the experimental data. The obtained data can be applied for commercial filter cells and pneumatic silencers.

Details

Title
Permeability of Aluminium Foams Produced by Replication Casting
Author
Furman, Eugeny L; Finkelstein, Arcady B; Cherny, Maxim L
Pages
49-57
Publication year
2013
Publication date
2013
Publisher
MDPI AG
e-ISSN
20754701
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1535633750
Copyright
Copyright MDPI AG 2013