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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering1 MSE 440/540: Processing of Metallic Materials Instructors: Yuntian Zhu Office: 308 RBII Ph: 513-0559 ytzhu@ncsu.edu Lecture 2: Solidification Theory Homework: Problem from notes,
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering2 Solidification Nearly every metal product started as a liquid at some point in time. -What is Solidification - What is the Melting Point? - What’s composition?
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering3 Nucleation and Growth During solidification, solid nuclei form in the liquid and subsequently grow until the entire volume is a solid. -What is the driving force for nucleation and growth?
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering4 Homogeneous Nucleation Consider free energy change when small spherical nuclei of solid is formed in a liquid L S G = H – TS ΔG = ΔH – TΔS At T m, ΔG = 0, ΔH = L ΔS = L/T m ΔG v = L – T(L/T m ) = L(1-T/T m )
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering5 Homogeneous Nucleation There is a critical radius r*, at a given undercooling ΔT where embryos can grow and reduce the free energy. r* occurs at HOMEWORK: Show that: r* =2 /ΔGv ΔG at r*, If ΔGv = LΔT/Tm, then = thermodynamic barrier to nucleation or work of nucleation Quiz: What is the physical origin of energy barrier for nucleation?
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering6 Homogeneous Nucleation Note that r* and ΔGv* decrease with increasing undercooling Quiz : The effect of T on solidification speed and microstructure.
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NC State University Heterogeneous Nucleation Department of Materials Science and Engineering7
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NC State University Heterogeneous Nucleation Rate Department of Materials Science and Engineering8 Innoculants (seeds): Nucleation of Melting: SL + LV < SV Low undercooling is needed for heterogeneous nucleation
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering9 Commercial Practice Dynamic Nucleation - Vibrate melt to collapse internal cavities - Fragmentation of existing solids; breaking of dendrite arms (crystal multiplication) - Electromagnetic mixing and stirring Nucleation of Melting - Why does melting usually occur at Tm, even at high heating rates? Most liquid metals wet their own solid, so the wetting angle Θ = 0 no energy barrier for nucleation
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering10 Commercial Practice Characteristics of a good inoculant - low interfacial energy between nucleant and growing solid - γ SP decreases with decreasing lattice mismatch between solids and nucleant with increasing chemical affinity (coherent interface) - Should be as stable as possible in the liquid melt Tm inoc > Tm melt - possess a high surface area (rough or pitted) -Smaller particles
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NC State University Department of Materials Science and Engineering11 Growth: Practical Results Crystals grow in two ways after nucleating -Planar growth – heat extraction through the solid phase and a smooth solid/liquid interface -Dendritic growth – formation of branched skeleton structures. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S07fPo45BvM
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NC State University Reading Assignment Read Chapter 5 HW: Department of Materials Science and Engineering12
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