36 research outputs found
Pattern Stability and Trijunction Motion in Eutectic Solidification
We demonstrate by both experiments and phase-field simulations that lamellar
eutectic growth can be stable for a wide range of spacings below the point of
minimum undercooling at low velocity, contrary to what is predicted by existing
stability analyses. This overstabilization can be explained by relaxing Cahn's
assumption that lamellae grow locally normal to the eutectic interface.Comment: 4 pages, 5 eps figure
Phase-field modeling of microstructural pattern formation during directional solidification of peritectic alloys without morphological instability
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 (), 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 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
Connectivity of phases and growth mechanisms in peritectic alloys solidified at low speed: an X-ray tomography study of Cu-Sn
The variety of microstructures that form at low solidification speed in peritectic alloys, bands, and islands, or even coupled (or cooperative) growth of the primary α and peritectic β phases, have been previously explained by nucleation-growth mechanisms. In a recent investigation on Cu-Sn, a new growth mechanism was conjectured on the basis of two-dimensional (2-D) optical microscopy and electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) observations made in longitudinal sections. In the present contribution, synchrotron-based tomographic microscopy has been used to confirm this mechanism: α and β phases totally interconnected in three dimensions and bands (or islands) can result from an overlay mechanism, rather than from a nucleation events sequence. When the lateral growth of a new layer is too fast, an instability can lead to the formation of a lamellar structure as for eutectic alloys