Aluminium Treatment — Degassing
Degassing Flux
Degassing flux for aluminium is a powder flux that, when spread across or plunged into the molten bath, releases fine gas bubbles that scavenge dissolved hydrogen from the aluminium melt as they rise through it — reducing hydrogen content before pouring and minimising the gas porosity that is the most common internal defect in aluminium castings.
Liquid aluminium absorbs hydrogen from atmospheric moisture and combustion products at elevated temperature; when the metal solidifies, the excess hydrogen precipitates as gas bubbles — gas porosity — that reduces mechanical properties, causes pressure-tight castings to leak, and creates voids exposed by machining. CFC Egypt's EGYFLUX 400 degassing flux powder is applied before each pour, generating gas bubbles that scavenge dissolved hydrogen throughout the bath as they rise. For large reverberatory and induction furnaces where powder coverage of a large bath area is practical, EGYFLUX 400 is the economical choice; for smaller furnaces and crucible operations, the tablet form (EGYHEX AL) provides precise metered dosing from a plunged position at bath depth.
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Where Degassing Flux Is Used
Aluminium degassing is required before pouring wherever gas porosity would cause quality failures in the casting — pressure testing, x-ray inspection, mechanical property requirements, or machining surface quality.
Pressure-Tight Castings — Hydraulic & Pneumatic Components
Pump housings, valve bodies, and hydraulic manifolds cast in aluminium must be free of gas porosity to pass pressure testing — typically hydrostatic pressure tests to 2 to 5 times operating pressure. Even small gas pores interconnected through the casting wall create leak paths. Degassing before each pour is the primary process control for achieving the low hydrogen content needed to produce pressure-tight aluminium castings consistently.
X-Ray Inspected Aerospace & Automotive Castings
Aerospace and safety-critical automotive castings are radiographically inspected to acceptance criteria such as ASTM E155 or equivalent, which define maximum permissible pore sizes and distributions. Gas porosity that exceeds these limits causes the casting to be scrapped or downgraded. Consistent degassing before each pour reduces gas pore population and size, improving the proportion of castings passing x-ray inspection at first attempt.
Sand & Shell Casting — Hydrogen Control
In sand and shell castings, gas cannot easily escape through the mould face during solidification, making pre-pour degassing the only effective control for gas porosity. Sand-cast aluminium components for marine, oil and gas, and power generation applications frequently require both degassing and low-porosity quality documentation. EGYFLUX 400 applied before each ladle or direct furnace pour keeps hydrogen below the threshold for visible porosity in these applications.