Freezing Shrinkage Dynamics and Surface Dendritic Growth of Floating Refractory Alloy Droplets in Outer Space

Author:

Wang Haipeng1,Liao Hui1,Hu Liang1,Zheng Chenhui1,Chang Jian1,Liu Dingnan1,Li Mingxing1,Zhao Jiongfei1,Xie Wenjun1,Wei Bingbo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Physical Science and Technology Northwestern Polytechnical University Xi'an 710072 China

Abstract

AbstractThe freezing shrinkage and dendritic growth are of great importance for various alloys solidified from high‐temperature liquids to solids since they dominate microstructure patterns and follow‐up processing. However, the microgravity freezing shrinkage dynamics is scarcely explored on the ground as it is hard to suppress the strong natural convection inside liquid alloys. Here, a series of in‐orbit solidification experiments is conducted aboard the China Space Station with a long‐term stable 10−5 g0 microgravity condition. The highest temperature up to 2265 K together with substantial liquid undercoolings far from a thermodynamically stable state are attained for both Nb82.7Si17.3 and Zr64V36 refractory alloys. Furthermore, the solidification under microgravity of a droplet is simulated to reveal the liquid–solid interface migration, temperature gradient, and flow field. The microgravity solidification process leads to freezing shrinkage cavities and distinctive surface dendritic microstructure patterns. The combined effects of shrinkage dynamics and liquid surface flow in outer space result in the dendrites growing not only along the tangential direction but also along the normal direction to the droplet surface. These space experimental results contribute to a further understanding of the solidification behavior of liquid alloys under a weaker convection condition, which is often masked by gravity on the ground.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Publisher

Wiley

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