Abstract
Crystals do eventually melt if they are heated to their characteristic melting point. However, this is practically only the case for high‐temperature stable crystals, whereas low‐temperature metastable crystals generally transform, before melting, into a more stable solid during heating. Here, it is illustrated that low‐temperature crystals can, however, be melted via fast differential scanning calorimetry (FDSC), even in metallic systems where nucleation and growth kinetics are rapid. For a Au–Si eutectic alloy, various metastable and stable solid states, i.e., (Au–α), (Au–β), γ, and (Au–Si), which form under well‐controlled conditions and melt at high heating rates by preventing the metastable‐to‐stable solid phase transition, are isolated. It is demonstrated that Au81.4Si18.6 can fully melt at various temperatures, i.e., 294 °C, 312 °C, 352 °C, and 363 °C, with differing melting enthalpies ranging from 6.52 to 9.83 kJ mol−1. The melting and crystallization paths of the metastable solids are determined by constructing an energy−temperature diagram. This approach advances the general understanding of nucleation in metallic and other systems, and is expected to contribute to the detailed understanding of thermophysical phenomena that occur at spatially reduced dimensions and/or short time scales, for example in thin‐film deposition, nanomaterials production, or additive manufacturing.
Highlights
This page was generated automatically upon download from the ETH Zurich Research Collection
If a metastable solid can be heated at sufficiently high rates to avoid any solid−solid phase transition, its melting point and enthalpy of growth kinetics are rapid
The melting and crystallization paths of the metastable solids ceutical ingredients,[3,4] often form at relatively slow rates by solid-state reactions so that conventional calorimetry studies can provide insight into their thermodynamic relationships; this is essential for the development of new functional molecules
Summary
Multistep Crystallization and Melting Pathways in the Free Energy Landscape of a Au–Si Eutectic Alloy.
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