Theoretical - Experimental Analysis of Cellular and Primary Dendritic Spacings during Unidirectional Solidification of Sn-Pb Alloys
Theoretical - Experimental Analysis of Cellular and Primary Dendritic Spacings during Unidirectional Solidification of Sn-Pb Alloys
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Structural parameters as grain size, dendritic and cellular spacings, segregated products, porosity and other phases are strongly influenced by the thermal behavior of the metal/mold system during solidification, imposing a close correlation between this and the resulting microstructure.Several unidirectional solidification studies with the objective of characterizing cellular and dendritic spacings have been developed in large scale involving solidification in steady-state heat flow.The main objective of this work is to determine the thermal solidification parameters during Back Scratchers the cellular/dendritic transition as well as to compare theoretical models that predict cellular and primary dendritic spacings with experimental results for solidification situations in unsteady-state heat flow.
Experiments were Notepads carried out in a water cooled unidirectional solidification apparatus and dilute alloys of the Sn-Pb system were used (Sn 1.5wt%Pb, Sn 2.5wt%Pb and Sn 5wt%Pb).
The upper limit of the Hunt-Lu cellular growth model closely matched the experimental spacings.The lower limit calculated with the Hunt-Lu dendritic model best generated the experimental results.The cellular/dendritic transition was observed to occur for the Sn 2.
5wt%Pb alloy over a range of analytical cooling rates from 0.28 K/s to 1.8 K/s.