Abstract

Fe-Co alloy melts with Co contents of 10, 30, and 60 at. pct were undercooled to investigate the dependence of the primary phase on grain coarsening. A pronounced characteristic is that the metastable fcc phase in the Fe-10 at. pct Co alloy and the metastable bcc phase in the Fe-30 at. pct Co alloy will primarily nucleate when undercoolings of the melts are larger than the critical undercoolings for the formation of metastable phases in both alloys. No metastable bcc phase can be observed in the Fe-60 at. pct Co alloy, even when solidified at the maximum undercooling of ΔT = 312 K. Microstructural investigation shows that the grain size in Fe-10 and Fe-30 at. pct Co alloys increases with undercoolings when the undercoolings of the melts exceed the critical undercoolings. The grain size of the Fe-60 at. pct Co alloy solidified in the undercooling range of 30 to 312 K, in which no metastable phase can be produced, is much finer than those of the Fe-10 and Fe-30 at. pct Co alloys after the formation of metastable phases. The model for breakage of the primary metastable dendrite at the solid-liquid interface during recalescence and remelting of dendrite cores is suggested on the basis of microstructures observed in the Fe-10 and Fe-30 at. pct Co alloys. The grain coarsening after the formation of metastable phases is analyzed, indicating that the different crystal structures present after the crystallization of the primary phase may play a significant role in determining the final grain size in the undercooled Fe-Co melts.

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