Contents
Introduction
You have heard about AZ91D magnesium alloy. It is often called the workhorse of die casting. Manufacturers use it for everything from automotive parts to power tools. The promise is simple: lightweight parts, good strength, and cost-effective production.
But real-world results can fall short. Maybe your parts show porosity. Perhaps corrosion appears faster than expected. Or the fine details you need just do not fill properly.
The good news? These problems have solutions. AZ91D remains the most widely used magnesium die casting alloy for good reason. This guide explains its properties, the process controls that matter, and how to get consistent results for your high-volume applications.
What Makes AZ91D the Industry Standard?
A Balanced Formula for Performance
AZ91D gets its name from its composition. It contains 9% aluminum and 1% zinc, with magnesium making up the balance. These numbers matter.
The aluminum provides strength and improves casting fluidity. The zinc refines the grain structure and boosts corrosion resistance. Together, they create an alloy that flows well into molds while delivering reliable mechanical properties.
| Property | Typical Value | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Tensile strength | 230–260 MPa | Handles structural loads |
| Yield strength | 150–170 MPa | Resists permanent deformation |
| Elongation | 3–5% | Allows some flexibility before breaking |
| Hardness | 65–75 HB | Balances wear resistance with machinability |
| Density | 1.81 g/cm³ | 33% lighter than aluminum |
Exceptional Casting Fluidity
AZ91D flows into thin sections easily. Wall thicknesses down to 0.5 mm are possible. Complex shapes with fine details—like logos or small threaded features—fill completely when process conditions are right.
This fluidity comes from its eutectic composition. The aluminum and magnesium combination melts at a consistent temperature. The metal remains fluid long enough to fill every cavity before solidifying.
A consumer electronics client once struggled with another magnesium alloy. Their laptop frames showed incomplete fills at the thin edges. Switching to AZ91D solved the problem immediately. The parts came out fully formed with sharp details.
How Should You Optimize the Die Casting Process?
Protection Against Oxidation
Magnesium reacts with oxygen. When molten, it can ignite or form oxides that weaken the part. Inert gas shielding is non-negotiable.
The standard approach uses a mixture of argon and sulfur hexafluoride (SF₆) . The argon pushes oxygen away. The SF₆ creates a protective film on the molten metal surface. Without this protection, surface oxides form. Those oxides lead to porosity and poor surface finish.
Hot-chamber die casting works best for AZ91D. The machine holds the molten metal in a heated chamber. It injects directly into the die. Cycle times are faster than cold-chamber methods.
Key parameters to control:
- Injection speed: 3–5 meters per second
- Injection pressure: 30–60 MPa
- Die temperature: 160–200°C (preheated)
These settings are lower than those for aluminum. That matters because it extends die life. A well-maintained die can produce 500,000 or more shots before requiring significant refurbishment.
Die Design Details That Matter
AZ91D flows well, but good die design still makes the difference between success and scrap.
Draft angles can be smaller than for aluminum. 0.5 to 1 degree usually suffices. The metal does not stick to the die as readily as aluminum does. This allows more design flexibility.
Venting is critical. Deep cavities need vents with 0.1 to 0.15 mm gaps. These allow trapped air to escape before the metal solidifies. Poor venting creates gas porosity—tiny holes that weaken the part.
Gating systems should use wide runners. The goal is to minimize pressure drop. The die should fill in 0.3 to 0.6 seconds. Fast filling prevents premature solidification and ensures complete cavity fill.
Cooling Rate Control
Cooling speed affects final properties. Faster cooling produces a finer grain structure. That translates to higher strength.
For thick sections, slower cooling prevents internal stresses. Stresses can cause cracking after ejection. The ideal approach balances cooling rates across the part geometry.
A transmission housing manufacturer I worked with had consistent cracking issues. The problem traced to uneven cooling. Thick sections cooled slower than thin ones, creating internal stress. Redesigning cooling channels in the die solved the problem and dropped scrap rates from 12% to under 4%.
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