Abstract

In this work, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations have been used to study the heterogeneous nucleation occurring at grain boundaries (GBs) during the austenite (FCC) phase to ferrite (BCC) phase transformation in a pure Fe polycrystalline system. The critical nucleus properties (including size, shape, and activation energy) determined by classical nucleation theory are compared with those obtained by using a combination of the multi-phase field method (MPFM) and the nudged elastic band (NEB) method. For nucleation events that exhibit low-energy facets completely embedded within the parent FCC phase, there is a good agreement between the MD and the MPFM result with respect to the critical nucleus size, shape, and nucleation energy barrier. For systems where the emerging nucleus contains facets that cross the GB plane, the MPFM-NEB, when compared to MD, yields a better prediction than the classical approach for the nucleus morphology. New observations from the MPFM-NEB method indicate that the critical nucleus shape may change with volume and therefore depends on the nucleation driving force (undercooling).

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