Liquid nitrogen cooling is widely used in the extrusion industrial practice in order to increase the production rate, to reduce the die temperature and to avoid defects on the profile exit surfaces resulting from an excessive heating. However, the efficiency of the cooling is deeply affected by position and design of the liquid nitrogen channel so that numerical modelling is gaining an increasing industrial interest in relation to the possibility offered to optimize the channel design without expensive and time-consuming experimental trials. In this work, a numerical FE model developed within COMSOL Multiphysics® is proposed and validated against experimental trials performed in industrial environment. The model combines the 3D simulation of the extrusion process with a 1D model of the cooling channel thus allowing the testing of a number of different solutions at the die design stage. The global aim of this work is the assessment of the liquid nitrogen cooling efficiency in the extrusion of an industrial aluminum profile and the proof of the potentials offered by numerical models to get an optimized channel design in terms of cooling efficiency, die thermal balancing and reduction of liquid nitrogen consumption.
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