Abstract
It is recognized that flow in the melt can have a profound influence on the dynamics
of a solidifying interface and hence on the quality of the solidified material. To better
understand the effect of fluid flow on the interface morphological stability and on the
cellular and dendritic growth, directional solidification experiments were carried out
in a horizontally placed Hele-Shaw cell with and without externally imposed parallel
shear flow. The specimen material used was SCN–1.0 Wt% acetone. The experiment
shows that the transient parallel flow has a stabilizing effect on the planar interface by
damping the existing initial perturbations. The left–right symmetry of crystal cells was
broken by the parallel flow, with cells tilting toward the incoming flow direction. The
tilting angle increased with the velocity ratio. The secondary dendrites were found
to either not appear or appear much later on the downstream side of the crystal
cells. The wavelengths of the initial perturbations and of the cellular interface were
insensitive to the imposed flow.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
23 articles.
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