6,738 research outputs found

    A phase-field-crystal approach to critical nuclei

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    We investigate a phase-field-crystal model for homogeneous nucleation. Instead of solving the time evolution of a density field towards equilibrium we use a String Method to identify saddle points in phase space. The saddle points allow to obtain the nucleation barrier and the critical nucleus. The advantage of using the phase-field-crystal model for this task is its ability to resolve atomistic effects. The obtained results indicate different properties of the critical nucleus compared with bulk crystals and show a detailed description of the nucleation process.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, submitte

    Thermodynamics and Thermokinetics to Model Phase Transitions of Polymers over Extended Temperature and Pressure Ranges Under Various Hydrostatic Fluids

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    We are grateful to InTech the publisher of the book "Thermodynamics - Interaction Studies - Solids, Liquids and Gases", for letting this publication being archived in this Open Access repository. The publication is available from Intech Open Access Publisher: http://www.intechopen.com/articles/show/title/thermodynamics-and-thermokinetics-to-model-phase-transitions-of-polymers-over-extended-temperature-aInternational audienceA scientific understanding of the behaviour of polymers under extreme conditions of temperature and pressure becomes inevitably of the utmost importance when the objective is to produce materials with well-defined final in-use properties and to prevent the damage of materials during on-duty conditions. The proper properties as well as the observed damages are related to the phase transitions together with intimate pattern organization of the materials. Thermodynamic and thermokinetic issues directly result from the thermodynamic independent variables as temperature, pressure and volume that can stay constant or be scanned as a function of time. Concomitantly, these variables can be coupled with a mechanical stress, the diffusion of a solvent, and/or a chemically reactive environment. A mechanical stress can be illustrated in a chemically inert environment by an elongation and/or a shear. Diffusion is typically described by the sorption of a solvent. A chemical environment is illustrated by the presence of a reactive environment as carbon dioxide or hydrogen for example. Challenging aspects are polymer pattern multi scale organizations, from the nanometric to the macrometric scale, and their importance regarding industrial and technological problems, as described in the state of the art in Part 2. New horizons and opportunities are at hands through pertinent approaches, including advanced ad hoc experimental techniques with improved modelling and simulation. Four striking illustrations, from the interactions between a solvent and a polymer to the growth patterns, are illustrated in Part 3

    Phase-field approach to polycrystalline solidification including heterogeneous and homogeneous nucleation

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    Advanced phase-field techniques have been applied to address various aspects of polycrystalline solidification including different modes of crystal nucleation. The height of the nucleation barrier has been determined by solving the appropriate Euler-Lagrange equations. The examples shown include the comparison of various models of homogeneous crystal nucleation with atomistic simulations for the single component hard-sphere fluid. Extending previous work for pure systems (Gránásy L, Pusztai T, Saylor D and Warren J A 2007 Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 art no 035703), heterogeneous nucleation in unary and binary systems is described via introducing boundary conditions that realize the desired contact angle. A quaternion representation of crystallographic orientation of the individual particles (outlined in Pusztai T, Bortel G and Gránásy L 2005 Europhys. Lett. 71 131) has been applied for modeling a broad variety of polycrystalline structures including crystal sheaves, spherulites and those built of crystals with dendritic, cubic, rhombododecahedral, truncated octahedral growth morphologies. Finally, we present illustrative results for dendritic polycrystalline solidification obtained using an atomistic phase-field model

    On probabilistic aspects in the dynamic degradation of ductile materials

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    Dynamic loadings produce high stress waves leading to the spallation of ductile materials such as aluminum, copper, magnesium or tantalum. The main mechanism used herein to explain the change of the number of cavities with the stress rate is nucleation inhibition, as induced by the growth of already nucleated cavities. The dependence of the spall strength and critical time with the loading rate is investigated in the framework of a probabilistic model. The present approach, which explains previous experimental findings on the strain-rate dependence of the spall strength, is applied to analyze experimental data on tantalum.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, 3 table

    Phase-field modeling of microstructural pattern formation during directional solidification of peritectic alloys without morphological instability

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    During the directional solidification of peritectic alloys, two stable solid phases (parent and peritectic) grow competitively into a metastable liquid phase of larger impurity content than either solid phase. When the parent or both solid phases are morphologically unstable, i.e., for a small temperature gradient/growth rate ratio (G/vpG/v_p), one solid phase usually outgrows and covers the other phase, leading to a cellular-dendritic array structure closely analogous to the one formed during monophase solidification of a dilute binary alloy. In contrast, when G/vpG/v_p is large enough for both phases to be morphologically stable, the formation of the microstructurebecomes controlled by a subtle interplay between the nucleation and growth of the two solid phases. The structures that have been observed in this regime (in small samples where convection effect are suppressed) include alternate layers (bands) of the parent and peritectic phases perpendicular to the growth direction, which are formed by alternate nucleation and lateral spreading of one phase onto the other as proposed in a recent model [R. Trivedi, Metall. Mater. Trans. A 26, 1 (1995)], as well as partially filled bands (islands), where the peritectic phase does not fully cover the parent phase which grows continuously. We develop a phase-field model of peritectic solidification that incorporates nucleation processes in order to explore the formation of these structures. Simulations of this model shed light on the morphology transition from islands to bands, the dynamics of spreading of the peritectic phase on the parent phase following nucleation, which turns out to be characterized by a remarkably constant acceleration, and the types of growth morphology that one might expect to observe in large samples under purely diffusive growth conditions.Comment: Final version, minor revisions, 16 pages, 14 EPS figures, RevTe
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