Abstract
External triggering of nucleation in an undercooled liquid metal has been performed for the first time in an electrostatically levitated sample of undercooled eutectic Ni60Nb40. With the Electrostatic Levitator (ESL) facility at NASA/MSFC, NiNb alloys were externally nucleated at various undercooling increments. Observation of the resulting microstructure indicates that only one nucleation site is initiated with a trigger if the undercooling is sufficiently high. Well-defined transition zones exist in all the samples. An "anomalous" fine structured eutectic is initially grown from the nucleation point into the undercooled liquid followed by an unexpected variable width transition zone leading to a coarse structured region of dendrites. Our study tends to corroborate the findings of other studies on highly undercooled eutectics regarding a coupled growth zone within which the lamellar structure is formed and outside of which the anomalous is found.
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