Solidification - Rilegato

Dantzig, Jonathan; Rappaz, Michel

 
9780849382383: Solidification

Al momento non sono disponibili copie per questo codice ISBN.

Sinossi

Solidification is one of the oldest processes known for producing complex shapes for applications ranging from art to industry, and today it still remains one of the most important commercial technologies for many materials. Since the 1980s, numerous fundamental developments in the understanding of solidification processes and microstructure formation have been derived from both analytical theories and the application of computational techniques using commonly available powerful computers. This book integrates these developments in a comprehensive volume that also presents and places them in the context of more classical theories. Divided into three sections, the text evolves from fundamentals to applications, giving professional engineers and students a firm understanding that they can readily apply.

The first part, Fundamentals and Macroscale Phenomena, presents the thermodynamics of solutions and then builds on that subject to motivate and describe equilibrium phase diagrams. Transport phenomena are discussed next, focusing on the issues of most importance to liquid-solid phase transformations, then moving on to describe in detail both analytical and numerical approaches to solving such problems.

The second part, Microstructure, employs these fundamental concepts for the treatment of nucleation, dendritic growth, microsegregation, eutectic and peritectic solidication, and microstructure competition. This part concludes with a chapter describing the coupling of macro- and microscopic phenomena in microstructure development.

Defects, the third and final section describes various types of defects that may occur ― with emphasis on porosity, hot tearing, and macrosegregation ― presented using the modeling tools and microstructure descriptions developed earlier in the text.

Users of this book can find software, figures, movies, and other supporting materials at the author's website by clicking on the downloads tab above.

Le informazioni nella sezione "Riassunto" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.

Contenuti

Each chapter starts with an introduction and ends with a Summary, Exercises, and References.

NOMENCLATURE AND DIMENSIONLESS GROUPS

1 OVERVIEW

1.1.1 Organization of the text

1.2 Solidification processes

1.2.1 Shape casting

1.2.2 Continuous and semi-continuous casting

1.2.3 Crystal growth processes

1.2.4 Welding

1.3 Summary

1.4 References

I Fundamentals and Macroscale Phenomena

2 THERMODYNAMICS

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Thermodynamics of unary systems

2.2.1 Single phase systems

2.2.2 Equilibrium of phases

2.3 Binary alloys

2.3.1 Thermodynamics of a single phase solution

2.3.2 Ideal and regular solutions

2.3.3 Equilibrium of two phases

2.3.4 Multi-component alloys and Gibbs’ phase rule

2.4 Departure from equilibrium

2.4.1 Interfacial equilibrium

2.4.2 True departure from equilibrium

3 PHASE DIAGRAMS

3.1 Motivation

3.2 Binary systems

3.2.1 Isomorphous systems: preliminary concepts

3.2.2 Isomorphous systems: construction from Gibbs free energy curves

3.2.3 Eutectic systems

3.2.4 Peritectic systems

3.2.5 Other binary systems

3.2.6 Calculation of binary alloy phase diagrams

3.3 Ternary systems

3.3.1 Ternary isomorphous systems

3.3.2 Ternary three-phase equilibrium

3.3.3 Ternary four-phase equilibrium: ternary eutectic

4 BALANCE EQUATIONS

4.1.1 Reference frames and definitions

4.1.2 Control volumes

4.2 Mass balance

4.3 Momentum balance

4.3.1 Linear elastic solids

4.3.2 Plastic deformation

4.3.3 Newtonian fluids

4.3.4 Average form of the momentum balance

4.4 Energy balance

4.5 Solute balance in multicomponent systems

4.6 Scaling

4.7 Summary

4.8 Exercises

4.9 References

5 ANALYTICAL SOLUTIONS FOR SOLIDIFICATION

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Solidification in a superheated melt

5.2.1 Pure materials

5.2.2 Planar front solidification of a binary alloy

5.2.3 Transient solidification of a binary alloy at constant velocity

5.3 Solidification in an undercooled melt

5.3.1 Planar front growth

5.3.2 Solidification of a paraboloid

5.4 The effect of curvature

5.4.1 Solidification of a sphere in an undercooled melt

5.5 Summary and conclusions

6 NUMERICAL METHODS FOR SOLIDIFICATION

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Heat conduction without phase change

6.2.1 Finite difference method

6.2.2 Finite volume method

6.2.3 Finite element method

6.3 Heat conduction with phase change

6.3.1 Fixed grid: Enthalpy methods

6.3.2 Fixed grid: Temperature recovery methods

6.3.3 Front tracking methods

6.3.4 Level set methods

6.4 Fluid flow

6.4.1 Finite difference method on staggered grids

6.4.2 Finite element methods for CFD

6.4.3 Example: Melting of pure Ga

6.5 Optimization and inverse methods

II Microstructure

7 NUCLEATION

7.2 Homogeneous nucleation

7.2.1 Embryos and nuclei

7.2.2 Nucleation rate

7.3 Heterogeneous nucleation

7.3.1 Motivation

7.3.2 Basic theory

7.3.3 Instantaneous or athermal nucleation

7.4 Mechanisms for grain refinement

8 DENDRITIC GROWTH

8.2 Free growth

8.2.1 General observations

8.2.2 Stability and scale selection for a freely growing sphere of a pure material

8.2.3 Extension to binary alloys

8.3 Constrained growth

8.3.1 General observations

8.3.2 Length scales and pattern selection in constrained growth

8.3.3 Stability of planar front growth in binary alloys

8.4 Growth of a needle crystal

8.4.1 General observations

8.4.2 Approximate models for growth at the dendrite tip

8.4.3 Primary dendrite arm spacing in constrained growth

8.4.4 Secondary dendrite arm spacing: Coarsening

8.5 Convection and dendritic growth

8.5.1 Convection and free growth

8.5.2 Convection and columnar growth

8.6 Phase-field methods

9 EUTECTICS, PERITECTICS AND MICROSTRUCTURE SELECTION

9.2 Eutectics

9.2.1 General considerations

9.2.2 Coupled eutectic growth morphologies

9.2.3 Jackson-Hunt analysis for regular eutectics

9.2.4 Operating point and stability of regular eutectic

9.2.5 Irregular eutectics

9.2.6 Other eutectic morphologies

9.3 Peritectics

9.3.1 General considerations

9.3.2 Nucleation

9.3.3 Solidification of peritectics at normal speed

9.3.4 Solidification of peritectics at low speed

9.4 Phase selection and coupled zone

9.4.1 Phase competition

9.4.2 Coupled zone

10 MICROSEGREGATION AND HOMOGENIZATION

10.2 1-D microsegregation models for binary alloys

10.2.1 Microsegregation with diffusion in the solid state

10.2.3 Volume averaged model

10.3 Homogenization and solution treatment .

10.3.1 Homogenization

10.3.2 Solution heat treatment

10.4 Multicomponent alloys

11 MACRO- AND MICROSTRUCTURES

11.2 Equiaxed grains growing in a uniform temperature field

11.2.1 Nucleation and growth of equiaxed eutectic grains

11.2.2 Transition from globular to dendritic grain morphologies

11.2.3 Nucleation and growth of equiaxed dendritic grains

11.3 Grains nucleating and growing in a thermal gradient

11.4 Columnar grains

11.5 Columnar-to-Equiaxed Transition

11.5.1 Hunt’s criterion

11.5.2 Microsegregation and cooling curves

11.6 Micro-macroscopic models

11.6.1 Thermal conditions

11.6.2 Analytical models of microstructure formation

11.6.3 Stochastic models of microstructure formation

11.6.4 Influence of convection

III Defects

12 POROSITY

12.2 Governing equations

12.3 Interdendritic fluid flow and pressure drop

12.3.1 Darcy equation

12.3.2 Niyama criterion

12.4 Thermodynamic of gases in solution

12.5 Nucleation and growth of pores

12.5.1 Pore Nucleation

12.5.2 The role of curvature during growth

12.5.3 Contribution of gas diffusion during growth

12.5.4 Summary of the coupling between pressure and pore fraction

12.6 Boundary conditions

12.7 Application of the concepts

13 DEFORMATION DURING SOLIDIFICATION AND HOT TEARING

13.2 Thermomechanics of castings

13.2.1 Origins of thermal stresses

13.2.2 General formalism for a fully solid material

13.2.3 Examples

13.3 Deformation of the mushy zone

13.3.1 Rheological measurements on semi-solid alloys

13.3.2 Coherency

13.3.3 Two-phase approach

13.4 Hot tearing

13.4.1 Characteristics of hot tears

13.4.2 Hot tearing tests and hot tear sensitivity

13.5 Hot tearing criteria and models

14 MACROSEGREGATION

14.2 Macrosegregation during planar front solidification

14.2.1 Thermal convection in a pure material

14.2.2 Convection during directional solidification of a binary alloy

14.3 Composition field and governing equations

14.4 Macrosegregation induced by solidification shrinkage

14.4.1 Initial solidification at the mold surface

14.4.2 Steady state

14.4.3 Final transient

14.5 Macrosegragation induced by fluid flow

14.5.1 Analysis based on Flemings’ criterion

14.5.2 General approach

14.5.3 Freckle formation

14.6 Macrosegregation induced by solid movement

14.6.1 Macrosegregation induced by grain movement

14.6.2 Macrosegregation induced by solid deformation

Product Description

Book by Dantzig Jonathan Rappaz Michel

Le informazioni nella sezione "Su questo libro" possono far riferimento a edizioni diverse di questo titolo.