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Solidification: Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (Utar)

This document discusses the process of solidification of metals from molten state. It describes the two main steps of solidification - nucleation and crystal growth. Nucleation involves the formation of stable nuclei in the melt which can then grow into crystals. Thermal gradients determine the shape and growth of individual grains. The document also discusses phase stability and the factors that determine the most stable phase based on Gibbs free energy. It explains the concepts of homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation during solidification of metals. Heterogeneous nucleation allows solidification at lower degrees of undercooling compared to homogeneous nucleation.

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Sim Hong Yi
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views

Solidification: Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman (Utar)

This document discusses the process of solidification of metals from molten state. It describes the two main steps of solidification - nucleation and crystal growth. Nucleation involves the formation of stable nuclei in the melt which can then grow into crystals. Thermal gradients determine the shape and growth of individual grains. The document also discusses phase stability and the factors that determine the most stable phase based on Gibbs free energy. It explains the concepts of homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation during solidification of metals. Heterogeneous nucleation allows solidification at lower degrees of undercooling compared to homogeneous nucleation.

Uploaded by

Sim Hong Yi
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 26

UNIVERSITI TUNKU ABDUL RAHMAN (UTAR)

Solidification

1
Solidification of Metals

• Metals are melted to produce finished and


semi-finished parts.

• Two steps of solidification:


• Nucleation: Formation of stable nuclei
in the melt
• Growth of nuclei into crystals and the
formation of grain structure

• Thermal gradients define the shape of each


grain.

2
Solidification of Metals

Schematic illustration showing the several stages in


the solidification of metals: (a) formation of nuclei
into crystals, (b) growth of nuclei into crystals, and
(c) joining together of crystals to form grains and
associated grains boundaries

3
Phase Stability

• Solidification process involves changes of


phase
• For phase transformations that occur at
constant temperature and pressure, the
relative stability of a system is determined by
Gibbs free energy (G)
• The Gibbs free energy of a system:
G = H – TS
H = enthalpy, T = absolute temperature, S = entropy

4
Phase Stability

• Enthalpy is a measure of the heat content


of a system
H = E + PV
E = internal energy , P = pressure, V = volume

• Internal energy (E): total kinetic and


potential energies of the atoms in the
system

• Transformation occurs, the heat absorbed


or evolved will depend on the E and PV.

5
Phase Stability

• Condensed phases (liquid & solid), PV


term is small in comparison to E, H  E

• S is a measure of the randomness of the


system

• At constant temperature & pressure, a


closed system (fixed mass & composition)
will be in stable equilibrium if it has the
lowest G (or dG = 0)

6
Phase Stability

G = H – TS

• The state with the highest stability : best


compromise between low enthalpy and high
entropy.

• At low temperature, solid phase most stable


(strongest atomic bonding, lowest E & H)

• High temperature, -TS dominates, phases


with more freedom of atom movement
(liquid & gas) most stable.
7
Phase Stability

Arrangement of atoms

A schematic variation of Gibbs free energy with the


arrangement of atoms. Configuration A has the lowest
free energy and is therefore the arrangement when
the system is at stable equilibrium. Configuration B is
a metastable equilibrium.
8
Formation of Stable Nuclei in Liquid Metal

• Two main mechanisms nucleation of solid particles in


liquid metal: Homogeneous and Heterogeneous.

• Depending on the site at which nucleating events occur

Homogenous Nucleation:
• Homogenous nucleation in a liquid melt occurs
when the metal itself provides atoms to form nuclei
• Nuclei of the new phase form uniformly throughout
the parent phase
• When pure liquid metal significantly undercooled,
several slow moving atoms bond each other to form
nuclei

9
Homogeneous Nucleation

• Nucleus stable grow into crystal, must reach critical


size

• Cluster of atoms below critical size is called


embryo.

• If the cluster of atoms reach critical size, they grow


into crystals. Else get dissolved.

• Cluster of atoms that are greater than critical size


are called nucleus.

10
Homogeneous Nucleation

Energies Involved in Homogenous Nucleation

Two energy changes must be considered:

1.The volume (or bulk) free energy, Gv released by


the liquid-to-solid transformation

2.The surface energy, Gs required to form the new


solid surfaces of the solidified particles

11
Homogeneous Nucleation

Volume Free Energy, Gv


• The driving energy for liquid-to-solid
transformation is the difference in the
volume (bulk) free energy ΔGV of the liquid
and that of the solid Liquid

• Released by liquid to solid transformation

• ΔGv is change in free energy per unit


volume between liquid and solid

• Free energy change for a spherical nucleus


of radius r is given by

GV 4 3
 r Gv
3
12
Homogeneous Nucleation

Surface Energy, Gs
• Energy opposes to the formation of embryos and nuclei: the
energy to form the surfaces of these particles

• ΔGs is the energy required to form new solid surface

• γ is specific surface free energy of the particle

• Then, ΔGs is equal to the specific surface free energy of the


particle, γ, times the area of the surface of the sphere, or

Gs  4r 2

• ΔGs is retarding energy

13
Homogeneous Nucleation
4
Total Free Energy (to form an embryo GT  r 3Gv  4r 2
or nucleus) 3
2
Since when r=r*, d(ΔGT)/dr = 0 r*  
Gv
ΔGs
+
Nucleus
ΔG*r
ΔGT
Free energy change (∆G)

Above critical Below critical


radius r* radius r*
ΔG
r
r*r* Radius of particle (r)
Energy Energy
lowered by Lowered by
growing into redissolving
crystals
- ΔGv
r* = critical nucleus: for r < r* nuclei shrink; for r >r* nuclei grow (to reduce energy)
14
Homogeneous Nucleation

• Magnitude of ΔGv depends on the temperature

∆Hf is the latent heat of fusion


Tm is the melting/solidification temperature (Kelvin)

• With lower temperature, both ΔG* and r* decrease accordingly

15
Homogeneous Nucleation

Critical Radius vs. Undercooling


• Greater the degree of undercooling, greater the change in
volume free energy ΔGv
• ΔGs does not change significantly with temperature
• As the amount of undercooling ΔT increases, critical
nucleus size decreases
• Critical radius (critical-sized nucleus) is related to
undercooling by relation
r* = Critical radius of nucleus
2Tm γ = Surface free energy
r*  ΔHf = Latent heat of fusion
H f T ΔT = Amount of undercooling (Tm - T)

Note: Hf and  are weakly dependent on T

16
Homogeneous Nucleation

Supercooling (Undercooling)
A phenomenon during the cooling of a liquid, an
appreciable nucleation rate (solidification) will begin only
after the temperature has been lowered to below the
equilibrium solidification (or melting) temperature (Tm).

Table: Values for the freezing temperature, heat of fusion, surface


energy, and maximum undercooling for selected metals

17
Heterogeneous Nucleation

• In practical situation, large amount of


undercooling is unlikely to occur for homogenous
nucleation

• Nucleation occurs in a liquid on the surfaces of


its container, insoluble impurities, grain
boundaries, dislocations, and other structural
material (nucleating agents) that lower the critical
free energy required to form a stable nucleus

• Nuclei form preferentially at structural


inhomogeneities

18
Heterogeneous Nucleation

• Since the surface energy is lower, the total


free-energy change for the formation of a
stable nucleus will be lower & the critical size
will be smaller

• Smaller amount of undercooling is required


to solidify or form stable nucleus

• Used excessively in industries

19
Heterogeneous Nucleation

• For heterogeneous to take place, solid nucleating


agent must be wetted by the liquid metal.
• The liquid should solidify easily on the nucleating
agent.
• Nucleating agent wetted by solidifying liquid, creating
a low contact angle  between the solid metal and
the nucleating angle
Solid-surface (SI), solid-liquid (SL), and
θ = contact angle liquid-surface (IL) interfacial energies
Liquid

SL
Solid
IL θ SI Nucleating
agent

20
Heterogeneous Nucleation

The energy barrier (ΔG*) for heterogeneous nucleation


is relatively lower than that of homogeneous nucleation
due to reduced surface free energy, 

21
Growth of Crystals and Formation of Grain Structure

• Nucleus grow into crystals in different orientations.


• Crystal boundaries are formed when crystals join
together at complete solidification.
• Crystals in solidified metals are called grains.
• Grains are separated by grain boundaries.
• More the number of
nucleation sites
available, more
the number of
grains formed.

Nuclei growing into grains


forming grain boundaries

22 22
Types of Grains

• Equiaxed Grains:
• Grains, smaller in size, grow equally in all directions.
• Formed at the sites of high concentration of the nuclei.
• Example: Cold mold wall

• Columnar Grains:
• Long thin and coarse.
• Grow predominantly in one direction.
• Formed at the sites of slow cooling
and steep temperature gradient.
• Example:Grains that are away from
the mold wall.

23
Kinetics of Solid-State Transformation

• Temperature dependence:
nucleation, growth,
transformation rates

• Time dependence rate


(kinetics of transformation)
is important in the heat
treatment of materials

• Fraction of reaction that


has occurred is measured
Plot of fraction reacted vs. the log of
as a function of time while time typical of many solid-state
temperature is maintained transformation which temperature is
held constant
as constant

24
Kinetics of Solid-State Transformation

• The fraction of transformation, y

y = 1 – exp(-ktn)
• Where k and n are time-dependent constants for the
particular reaction. This expression is referred to as
the Avrami equation

• The rate of a transformation is taken as the


reciprocal of time required for the transformation to
proceed halfway to completion, t0.5 or
1
Rate =
t0.5
25
Kinetics of Solid-State Transformation

Percent recrystallization as a function of time and at


constant temperature for pure copper

26

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