https://doi.org/10.1140/epje/i2020-11940-5
Regular Article
Growth competition during columnar solidification of seaweed microstructures
Insights from 3-D phase-field simulations
1
School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy, Arizona State University, 551 E. Tyler Mall, 85287, Tempe, AZ, USA
2
Florida Institute of Technology, Allen S. Henry Chair and University Professor, 150 W. University Blvd., 32955, Melbourne, FL, USA
* e-mail: kumar.ankit@asu.edu
Received:
2
June
2019
Accepted:
14
February
2020
Published online:
25
February
2020
The mechanisms by which interfacial instabilities instigate the growth of solidification patterns is a topic of longstanding interest. In columnar solidification of metallic melts, where the solid-liquid interfacial energy is anisotropic, evolving dendritic patterns compete depending on their relative misorientation. By contrast, organic “plastic crystals”, such as alloys based on succinonitrile, where the anisotropy in their solid-liquid interfacial energy is extremely weak, solidify forming seaweed patterns that typically exhibit little, if any, growth competition. We explore in this study mechanisms by which columnar solidification microstructures of binary alloys with low crystalline anisotropy compete. We adopt toward this end a validated Navier-Stokes multiphase-field approach to characterize the influence of grain misorientation, seed morphology, and melt advection on the growth competition. Simulated seaweed patterns indicate profound influences of all three factors, although characteristic solidification morphologies are observed to evolve depending on the melt flow intensity.
Key words: Topical issue: Branching Dynamics at the Mesoscopic Scale
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature, 2020