Coatings applied on steel molds used for casting aluminum parts have two main purposes: avoid mold metal reaction and control thermal transfer to obtain directional solidification. The coatings widely known to foundry operators are water-based sodium-silicate bonded ceramic suspensions; they are air sprayed and cured on mold surfaces and typically last for 100 casting cycles. Although thermal sprayed coatings have been shown to last more than 5000 casting cycles, they are not yet the preferred mold protection method. This study addresses the issue by developing a knowledge base of thermal transfer properties that can be achieved with air plasma sprayed magnesium zirconate powders. The properties are assessed on an instrumented mold using the inverse technique for different coating compositions.

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