Welcome, Gary Park!
Could you detail some aspects?
- Are there voids in the steel box somewhere? I believe the box is full with sand and polystyrene foam.
- Do you remove the polystyrene somehow before casting the iron? I believe iron melts the polystyrene foam directly.
Unless you introduce significant oxygen, there will be too little present in the box. 60kg oxygen occupy 50m3 as pure gas or 2003 as air.
Now, if the polystyrene is pyrolysed by the molten iron, it will emit little gas: all the hydrogen evolves pure and as hydrocarbons like methane, ethylene, maybe some benzene. The 800 mol of H2 from polystyrene would make in the order of 400 mol gases, which take 10m3 at 300K and 30m3 at 1000K, so large venting is needed.
I suppose that the rest of the carbon (=most) from polystyrene ends dissolved in the iron if you cast directly on the foam, and this can be a worry. For 1m3, 12kg C in 7800kg Fe make a mean 0.15%. This changes the properties of construction or allied steel (and iron?) and botches some steel compositions that guarantee <0.05% C. Worse: the added carbon must stay concentrated at the part's faces.
So: did I understand the process properly? It's the description I read long ago. Or do you remove the foam before casting the iron?
If you don't want to burn the polystyrene before casting, you could try to dissolve it. Acetone for instance does it. Just check that the polystyrene is really gone, since acetone first frees the foaming gas very quickly but leaves a compact residue.