Melting and Resolidification of a Substrate Caused by Molten Microdroplet Impact

Author:

Attinger D.1,Poulikakos D.1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Thermodynamics in Emerging Technologies, Institute of Energy Technology, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), 8092 Zurich, Switzerland

Abstract

This paper describes the main features and results of a numerical investigation of molten microdroplet impact and solidification on a colder flat substrate of the same material that melts due to the energy input from the impacting molten material. The numerical model is based on the axisymmetric Lagrangian Finite-Element formulation of the Navier–Stokes, energy and material transport equations. The model accounts for a host of complex thermofluidic phenomena, exemplified by surface tension effects and heat transfer with solidification in a severely deforming domain. The dependence of the molten volume on time is determined and discussed. The influence of the thermal and hydrodynamic initial conditions on the amount of substrate melting is discussed for a range of superheat, Biot number, and impact velocity. Multidimensional and convective heat transfer effects, as well as material mixing between the droplet and the substrate are found and quantified and the underlying physics is discussed. Good agreement in the main features of the maximum melting depth boundary between the present numerical results and published experiments of other investigators for larger (mm-size) droplets was obtained, and a complex mechanism was identified, showing the influence of the droplet fluid dynamics on the substrate melting and re-solidification.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science

Reference31 articles.

1. Attinger, D., Haferl, S., Zhao, Z., and Poulikakos, D., 2000, “Transport Phenomena in the Impact of a Molten Droplet on a Surface: Macroscopic Phenomenology and Microscopic Considerations: Part II—Heat Transfer and Solidification,” in Annual Review of Heat Transfer, C. L., Tien, ed., Vol. XI, Begell House, NY, pp. 145–205.

2. Haferl, S., Zhao, Z., Giannakouros, J., Attinger, D., and Poulikakos, D., 2000, “Transport Phenomena in the Impact of a Molten Droplet on a Surface: Macroscopic Phenomenology and Microscopic Considerations: Part I—Fluid Dynamics,” in Annual Review of Heat Transfer, C. L., Tien, ed., Vol. XI, Begell House, NY, pp. 65–143.

3. Zarzalejo, L. J., Schmaltz, K. S., and Amon, C. H., 1999, “Molten Droplet Solidification and Substrate Remelting in Microcasting: Part I—Numerical Modeling and Experimental Verification,” Heat and Mass Transfer,34, pp. 477–485.

4. Orme, M., Liu, Q., and Fischer, J., 2000, “Mono-Disperse Aluminum Droplet Generation and Deposition for Net-Form Manufacturing of Structural Components,” in Eighth International Conference on Liquid Atomization and Spray Systems, Pasadena, CA, USA, July 2000, pp. 200–207.

5. Amon, C. H., Schmaltz, K. S., Merz, R., and Prinz, F. B., 1996, “Numerical and Experimental Investigation of Interface Bonding via Substrate Remelting of an Impinging Molten Metal Droplet,” ASME J. Heat Transfer, 118, pp. 164–172.

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