Abstract

The microstructural development associated with solidification in undercooled Fe-Ni alloys has been reported in different studies to follow various pathways, with apparent dissimilarities existing as a function of sample size and processing conditions. In order to identify the possible hierarchy of microstructural pathways and transitions, a systematic evaluation of the microstructural evolution in undercooled Fe-Ni alloys was performed on uniformly processed samples covering seven orders of magnitude in volume. At appropriate undercooling levels, alternate solidification pathways become thermodynamically possible and metastable product structures can result from the operation of competitive solidification kinetics. For thermal history evaluation, a heat flow analysis was applied and tested with large Fe-Ni alloy particles (1 to 3 mm) to assess undercooling potential. Alloy powders (10 to 150 µm), with large liquid undercoolings, were studied under the same composition and processing conditions to evaluate the solidification kinetics and microstructural evolution, including face-centered cubic (fcc)/body centered cubic (bcc) phase selection and the thermal stability of a retained metastable bcc phase. The identification of microstructural transitions with controlled variations in sample size and composition during containerless solidification processing was used to develop a microstructure map which delineates regimes of structural evolutions and provides a unified analysis of experimental observations in the Fe-Ni system.

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