UNIVERSITI TUNKU ABDUL RAHMAN (UTAR)
Solidification
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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.
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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
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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
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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.
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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)
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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.
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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.
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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
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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.
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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
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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
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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 4r 2
• ΔGs is retarding energy
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Homogeneous Nucleation
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Total Free Energy (to form an embryo GT r 3Gv 4r 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)
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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
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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
2Tm 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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Heterogeneous Nucleation
The energy barrier (ΔG*) for heterogeneous nucleation
is relatively lower than that of homogeneous nucleation
due to reduced surface free energy,
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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
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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.
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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
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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
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Kinetics of Solid-State Transformation
Percent recrystallization as a function of time and at
constant temperature for pure copper
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