New and more complex casting technologies are growing, and foundries are using innovative methods to reduce cost and energy consumption and improve their product qualities. Numerical techniques, as tools to design and examine the process improvements, are also evolving continuously to embrace modelling of more dynamic systems for industrial applications. This paper will present a fresh approach towards the numerical simulation of dynamic processes using an evolving and dynamic mesh technique. While the conventional numerical techniques have been employed for these dynamic processes using a fixed domain approach, the more realistic evolving approach is used herein to match the complex material processes in new foundries. The underpinning of this new dynamic approach is highlighted by an evolving simulation environment where multiple mesh entities are appended to the existing numerical domain at timesteps. Furthermore, the change of the boundary and energy sources within casting process simulations have rationally been presented and its profound effects on the computational time and resources have been examined. The discretization and solver computational features of the technique are presented and the evolution of the casting domain (including its material and energy contents) during the process is described for semi-continuous casting process applications.
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