Abstract

Spheroidal graphite in ductile cast irons forms in a divorced eutectic solidification, controlled by interstitial diffusion of carbon through the enveloping austenitic shell. As technical cast irons are multicomponent alloys, carbon diffusion can strongly be affected by content and chemical gradient of other solute elements. During growth of a eutectic cell, all solute elements are partitioned at the austenite/liquid interface. Substitutional diffusion within the austenite is almost negligible, but expansion-induced spatial displacement of the iron-rich matrix and solute atoms during graphite growth significantly complicates multidimensional numerical simulation. A recently developed volumetric multi-phase-field approach, implemented in the Micress software, now accounts for the volume expansion and related matter and solute transport. In the present case study, this approach is applied to investigate the evolving chemical gradients and their potential effect on carbon diffusion during growth of a three-dimensional eutectic cast iron cell. Phase and concentration dependent thermodynamic data, partial molar volumes and diffusion coefficients are evaluated from linked Calphad-databases. The interface properties of the polycrystalline spheroidal graphite nodule are modelled based on a dedicated effective multi-facetted anisotropy function. A special target is to investigate whether increase in Si content may result in a significant reduction of the carbon flux, eventually favoring graphite degeneration and chunky growth.

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