Magnesium alloys are one of the lightest of all the structural materials. Because of their excellent physical and mechanical properties the
alloys have been used more and more often in various branches of industry. They are cast mainly (over 90%) on cold and hot chamber die
casting machines. One of the byproducts of casting processes is process scrap which amounts to about 40 to 60% of the total weight of a
casting. The process scrap incorporates all the elements of gating systems and fault castings. Proper management of the process scrap is
one of the necessities in term of economic and environmental aspects.
Most foundries use the process scrap, which involves adding it to a melting furnace, in a haphazard way, without any control of its content
in the melt. It can lead to many disadvantageous effects, e.g. the formation of a hard buildup at the bottom of the crucible, which in time
makes casting impossible due to the loss of the alloy rheological properties. The research was undertaken to determine the effect of an
addition of the process scrap on the mechanical properties of AZ91 and AM50 alloys. It has been ascertained that the addition of a specific
amount of process scrap to the melt increases the mechanical properties of the elements cast from AZ91 and AM50 alloys.
The increase in the mechanical properties is caused mainly by compounds which can work as nuclei of crystallization and are introduced
into the scrap from lubricants and anti-adhesive agents. Furthermore carbon, which was detected in the process scrap by means of SEM
examination, is a potent grain modifier in Mg alloys [1-3].
The optimal addition of the process scrap to the melt was determined based on the statistical analysis of the results of studies of the effect
of different process scrap additions on the mean grain size and mechanical properties of the cast parts.
Approach to the heritage of communism have been one of the most important subjects of public debate in Poland. Initially a field of conflict between post-communist leftist and post- ‘Solidarity’ parties, these controversies eventually turned into a conflict between the ‘liberals’ and the ‘conservatives’ from the two main post-‘Solidarity’ political parties – namely, the Civic Platform (Platforma Obywatelska) and Law and Justice (Prawo i Sprawiedliwość). The article reconstructs the most important political debates on de-communisation and ‘vetting’. The other issue highlighted by the author is the heated debates between historians on contemporary history. Subjects such as various forms of resistance against the communist rule, including the post-war armed Underground, along with the question of interpreting documents of the former secret police remain a field of controversies. Recent years have seen the opening of new debates related to the politics of memory and the questions of the role of museums and historical exhibitions in Poland.