Die Casting Shrinkage Porosity: 9 Critical Causes

Aluminum die casting gas porosity exposed in tapped hole and machined surfaces (HPDC)
Die casting shrinkage porosity and shrinkage cavities weaken HPDC parts and cause leaks. Learn 9 critical causes and proven fixes in design, gating, cooling, and pressure feeding.
Aluminum die casting gas porosity exposed in tapped hole and machined surfaces (HPDC)

In high pressure die casting (HPDC), most castings solidify sequentially—areas far from the gate freeze first, while regions near the gate solidify last. But because molten aluminum shrinks in both the liquid and solidification stages, the casting volume decreases during freezing. If the last-solidifying zone cannot be fed with enough liquid metal under pressure, shrinkage porosity or shrinkage cavities will form inside the part.

These defects don’t just affect appearance; they can severely weaken mechanical performance and even trigger cracking or fracture during service.

What Are Shrinkage Porosity and Shrinkage Cavities?

Examples of sink and shrinkage defects on die-cast parts, including surface sink, sink in hole, thread shrinkage, and surface shrinkage
Four typical die casting shrinkage-related defects: (a) surface sink, (b) sink inside a hole, (c) thread shrinkage, and (d) surface shrinkage, each circled to highlight the defect area.

Although often discussed together, they are not the same:

Shrinkage Porosity (Microshrinkage)

  • Many small, dispersed voids distributed inside the casting
  • Usually appears in large castings or thick sections
  • More uniform and “spongy” in structure

Shrinkage Cavity (Macroshrinkage)

  • Large, concentrated voids in internal hotspots
  • Shape is irregular
  • Cavity walls are rough with dendritic crystals, unlike smooth gas pores
  • Commonly located at the center or thick wall areas

Both types reduce density, strength, sealing performance, and machining reliability.

Die Casting Shrinkage Porosity: 9 Critical Causes

Below are the 9 most common causes of die casting shrinkage porosity and shrinkage cavities you should check first.

1. Unreasonable Part Design

If the part has:

  • Thermal hotspots (heat concentration)
  • Sudden wall-thickness changes
  • Sharp corners or thin-to-thick transitions

Then thick zones cool slowly and shrink without enough feeding, creating cavities or porosity.

Before-and-after part design optimization showing reduced shrinkage porosity risk in die casting simulation
Design update (top) and shrinkage-volume simulation (bottom) show how adding/supporting features and redistributing thickness dramatically lowers shrinkage risk in the hotspot area.

2. Poor Die Cooling System Design

When cooling channels are poorly arranged (wrong quantity, spacing, or depth), temperature differences across the part become too large, and hotspots solidify last without feeding.

3. Insufficient Feeding (Poor Pressure Compensation)

In HPDC, die temperature often forms an upper-cooler / lower-hotter gradient. If the last-freezing region is not connected to a liquid metal reservoir under pressure, shrinkage defects appear.

4. Pouring Temperature Too High

Overheated melt increases total shrinkage volume and raises the risk of shrinkage cavities. High temperature also promotes oxidation and gas-related defects that can worsen shrinkage.

5. Shot Speed or Intensification Pressure Too Low

Low injection ratio or low intensification pressure means the metal cannot be packed tightly during solidification, leaving shrinkage voids.

6. Holding Pressure Time Too Short

If holding time is insufficient, molten metal can’t continue feeding shrinking zones before gates freeze.

Simulation sequence showing different cooling and feeding configurations to reduce hot spots in a die casting boss
Four design/process setups compare hot-spot results around a cylindrical boss. Adding targeted cooling or feeding elements (blue) progressively lowers hot-spot intensity and shrinkage risk.

7. Inadequate Gating System

Examples:

  • Ingate too thin or too small
  • Poor ingate direction
  • Early gate freezing blocks pressure transfer and feeding

8. Alloy Composition Effects

Some elements increase shrinkage tendency. For Al-Si alloys, silicon improves castability, but excess Si narrows the mushy zone, lengthens freezing time, and raises shrinkage risk.

9. Biscuit Too Thin

If the poured metal volume is low, the biscuit becomes too thin to transmit intensification pressure, weakening feeding ability.

How to Fix Die Casting Shrinkage Porosity (Fast, Practical)

1. Optimize Part Structure

Goal: eliminate hotspots and make solidification more uniform.
Common fixes:

  • Use fillets instead of sharp corners
  • Smooth thickness transitions
  • Add ribs or hollow structures to remove heat concentration

2. Lower Pouring Temperature (Within Safe Window)

Avoid overheating. A stable temperature window reduces total shrinkage and defect probability.

3. Upgrade Ingate Design

Adjust:

  • Ingate area
  • Number of ingates
  • Flow direction

So that metal fills deep cavities, thin walls, and hard-to-fill zones first, while still maintaining pressure feeding to the last-freezing areas.

4. Ensure Proper Biscuit Thickness

A sufficient biscuit acts as the pressure reservoir during intensification to feed shrinkage zones.

5. Apply Local Squeeze Feeding

Using squeeze pins during solidification can force liquid metal into shrinking zones, effectively reducing shrinkage cavities.

6. Improve Die Cooling Balance

  • Add cooling channels near shrinkage zones
  • Increase channel diameter or depth
  • Extend spray time locally if needed

This removes heat faster from hotspots and narrows the solidification gap.

7. Fine-Tune Alloy Chemistry

Adjusting certain elements (e.g., slightly increasing Fe or reducing Cu in some cases) can shorten freezing time and reduce isolated liquid regions, lowering shrinkage risk.

Case Study: Shrinkage in an Aluminum Magneto Cover

A magneto cover casting had an average wall thickness of 5.32 mm, fairly uniform overall, yet significant shrinkage was found in thick rib-to-pillar junctions after sectioning.

Simulation Findings

  • Gates fully solidified at 5.9 s
  • Hotspot regions remained above the solidus temperature until 18.8 s
  • Severe thermal imbalance + early gate freezing prevented pressure feeding
Sectioned die casting showing shrinkage porosity at hot-spot regions, with magnified microstructure insets
Cross-section views of a die-cast part. The circled hot-spot areas contain dense shrinkage porosity, confirmed by the zoomed microstructure images indicated by arrows.

Improvements

  1. Raise pouring temperature from 630 → 640°C
    • Extended ingate solidification time 5.9 → 6.9 s, improving feeding.
  2. Strengthen local cooling
    • Increased cooling channel diameter and quantity
    • Replaced H13 core pin with beryllium copper for higher thermal conductivity
    • Reduced maximum thick-area solidification time 25 → 19 s.
  3. Optimize runner and gate direction
    • Curved branch runners to reduce temperature drop
    • Redirected some ingates toward thick zones for better feeding.

Result

Shrinkage porosity/cavities were dramatically reduced and became invisible to the naked eye.

Improved die casting cross-sections showing shrinkage hotspots eliminated after optimization
After design/cooling/gating optimization, the sectioned die cast part shows no obvious shrinkage porosity in the previously critical areas (A, B), as confirmed by the zoomed insets.

Quick Checklist for Shrinkage Control

  • Remove hotspots through smarter part design
  • Balance cooling and avoid cold/hot extremes
  • Keep pouring temperature stable—not overheated
  • Ensure adequate biscuit thickness
  • Prevent early gate freezing
  • Use enough intensification pressure and holding time
  • Add squeeze pins in chronic shrinkage zones
  • Maintain stable alloy composition

Need Help Fixing Shrinkage Defects?

Shrinkage porosity and cavities are often a combined result of structure, gating, cooling balance, and HPDC pressure feeding. If you’re seeing repeat shrinkage in a specific area, it usually means tooling + process need to be optimized together.

At Cast Mold, we provide high pressure die casting and mold manufacturing services. From DFM/Moldflow validation to gating/cooling optimization and stable mass production, we help customers eliminate defects like shrinkage porosity before they affect delivery or performance.

Aluminum Die Casting Services

Learn more about our aluminum high pressure die casting services in China.

Share:

More Posts

Send Us A Message

Recent Blog Posts

High pressure die casting mold steel surface showing cavitation pits near the gate and severe thermal cracking in the cavity region.

High Pressure Die Casting Mold Steel Selection: How to Balance Life, Cracking and Cost

Choosing the right high pressure die casting mold steel is a balance between heat checking,......
High pressure die casting cell with an industrial robot handling a large aluminum structural part amid steam in an automated factory.

Die Casting Release Agent Spraying: How to Get Mold Spray Right

Learn how the Leidenfrost effect, spray methods and process parameters influence die casting release agent......
Aluminum die casting gas porosity exposed in tapped hole and machined surfaces (HPDC)

Die Casting Shrinkage Porosity: 9 Critical Causes

Die casting shrinkage porosity and shrinkage cavities weaken HPDC parts and cause leaks. Learn 9......

Need Custom Parts?

Scroll to Top

Request for Quote or Information

We would be glad to receive your request for quote.

Please email us your detailed requirements including 2D drawing & 3D Model and Quantity.

  • sales@cast-mold.com
  • +86 18718679416
  • 101, No.6, Yongshun Road, Basha Town, Humen Town, Dongguan City, Guangdong Province.

we can arrange pick-up when you visit us.

We’re close to Shenzhen International Airport, Hong Kong International Airport, and Guangzhou Airport.