Abstract

The aim of this investigation is to provide theoretical justification of the crystallizing nucleus formation in liquid iron. To solve this problem, the authors put forward the fluctuation hypothesis: short range order region formation in liquid metal takes place due to temperature fluctuations, and the temperature of the short range order is the temperature fluctuation around Kelvin scale zero in the course of crystallization time. The investigations were carried out for liquid state of the substance, in particular, for iron in paramagnetic state at the melting temperature. Analytical derivation of the temperature fluctuation value was given. Analytical expressions were obtained to define the average number of atoms in the short range order region for crystallizing iron. The investigation results show that short range order contains enough atoms to provide interaction with pulsed magnetic field resulting in the increase in the number of crystallization nuclei and in the decrease of their size. The obtained results can be used in the decision-making process concerning some manufacturing operations aimed at providing homogeneous structure of metals, particularly, in ferrous and non-ferrous metallurgy.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call