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Dendrite growth within supercooled liquid tungsten and tungsten-tantalum isomorphous alloys

  • L. Hu
  • , W. L. Wang
  • , S. J. Yang
  • , L. H. Li
  • , D. L. Geng
  • , L. Wang
  • , B. Wei
  • Northwestern Polytechnical University Xian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

The dendrite growth in both supercooled liquid pure W and binary W-Ta isomorphous alloys has been observed and measured by an electrostatic levitation technique. The liquid W and W-x%Ta (x = 25, 50, 75) alloys were substantially supercooled by up to 733 K (0.2 Tm) and 773 K (0.23TL), respectively. The measured density and the ratio of specific heat to emissivity displayed a linearly increasing tendency versus supercooling. The thermal dendrites in supercooled liquid tungsten achieved a maximum growing velocity of 41.3 m·s−1, and the concurrent recalescence process exhibited Johnson-Mehl-Avrami type kinetics. Liquid W-Ta alloys showed stronger supercoolability but a lower maximum dendrite growth velocity of only 35.2 m·s−1. The dendritic growth kinetics was always characterized by a power function relation to liquid supercooling. The microstructure of equiaxed grains transforms to the well-developed dendrites with the increase of supercooling. The grain refinement effect resulting from dendrite fragmentation took place in a moderate supercooling regime in rapidly solidified W-Ta alloys.

Original languageEnglish
Article number085901
JournalJournal of Applied Physics
Volume121
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Feb 2017

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