Abstract

The wetting phenomena of molten alloy/ceramic substrate depend on the bonding characteristics of liquid alloys and ceramics as well as on the magnitude of interactive forces at the interface. According to this, the first step of this investigation is to determine the surface properties of Ag–Cu, Ag–Ti and Cu–Ti liquid alloys. The energetics of mixing in liquid alloys has been analysed through the study of surface properties (surface tension and surface composition) and microscopic functions (concentration fluctuations in the long-wavelength limit and chemical short-range order parameter) in the frame of statistical mechanical theory in conjunction with the quasi-lattice theory (QLT). The results obtained for these binary systems have been extended to the ternary Ag–Cu–Ti system. Combining the Young and the Dupré equations, the computed results of surface tension together with contact angle data have been used to calculate the work of adhesion and, in the case of non-reactive wetting, the interfacial tension between the solid substrate and the liquid alloys over the whole concentration range. The evaluation of the interfacial tension values is determined from calculated and measured data using solid surface tension data from literature. These results provide more information on the characteristics of metal–ceramic systems, and are therefore useful in guiding experiments, or in predicting the surface properties of metallic systems with similar characteristics as well as their wetting behaviour in contact with ceramic materials.

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