Abstract

In order to understand the nucleation on ceramic particles in the melts of metal-matrix composites (MMCs), the effect of segregation of solute on the surface of reinforcement particles in the melt has been analyzed as a function of particle temperature and the surface energy of the particle/liquid melt. The temperature of the particle in the melt, calculated analytically, was found to become close to the melt temperature within a very short time of contact between the particle and the melt. The solute concentration near the particle surface will, therefore, primarily be influenced by the surface energy of the particle and the melt. Based on this, the undercooling due to solute segregation around the particle and the chemical free-energy change due to the formation of the new solid phase on the particle were calculated in selected hypo- and hypereutectic Al-Si alloy melts containing (1) SiC particles or (2) graphite particles. The chemical free-energy change (driving force for nucleation) due to the formation of the new phase on the particle is lower for hypoeutectic compositions than for hypereutectic compositions in the aluminum-silicon alloy systems; this is due to the higher undercooling in the hypereutectic alloys due to solute segregation on the surface of the particle. This suggests that the formation of the primary phase on the surfaces of particles in the melt should be more favorable in the hypereutectic compositions than for hypoeutectic compositions. This also indicates that even when the particle temperature is not significantly lower than the liquidus temperature, nucleation on the particles can take place due to the segregation of the solute on the particles. Experimental observations of the microstructure of several cast metal-matrix composites, including Al-Si-SiC and Al-Si-graphite, show (1) the presence of silicon in contact with the reinforcement particles in hypereutectic alloys, suggesting that nucleation and growth of primary silicon under certain conditions occurs on silicon carbide and graphite particles, possibly due to solute segregation on the surface of the particles, and (2) the presence of reinforcement particles in the last-freezing interdendritic regions of the primary phases in hypoeutectic alloys, suggesting the absence of nucleation of primary phases on the reinforcement surface, as predicted by the analysis.

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