Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7880873 Acta Materialia 2015 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
To characterize the dynamical formation of three-dimensional (3-D) arrays of cells and dendrites under diffusive growth conditions, in situ monitoring of a series of experiments on a transparent succinonitrile-0.24 wt.% camphor model alloy was carried out under low gravity in the Device for the Study of Critical Liquids and Crystallization (DECLIC) Directional Solidification Insert on board the International Space Station (ISS). The present paper focuses on the study of the transient solid-liquid interface recoil. Numerical thermal modeling led us to identify two thermal contributions to the interface recoil that increase with the pulling rate and add to the classical recoil associated with the solute boundary layer formation. As a consequence of those additional contributions, the characteristic front recoil is characterized by a fast initial transient followed by stabilization to a plateau whose location depends on pulling rate. The analysis of comparative experiments carried out on the ground shows the absence of stabilization of the interface position, attributed to longitudinal macrosegregation of the solute induced by convection. This behavior is surprisingly also observed in space experiments for low pulling rates. An order of magnitude analysis of the mode of solute transport reveals that for these conditions, the effective level of reduced gravity on board the ISS is not sufficiently low to suppress convection so that the interface recoils with longitudinal macrosegregation in a similar way as in ground experiments.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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