AMP Slides Lecture17
AMP Slides Lecture17
AMP Slides Lecture17
• Historical Perspective
• Dendritic Growth
• The CET
• Conclusions
Mallet’s home
“Delville”
Glasnevin, Dublin.
Reported in :
“On the physical conditions
involved in the construction of
artillery”
Robert Mallet,
Longman, Brown, Green,
Longmans and Roberts,
London, 1856
…we have the folly still to cling to making numerous and useless sharp
angles and corners, and sudden changes of form and of dimension on
the exterior of all our ordnance, and so prolong in the most needless
way one cause of their weakness.
That gun, however plain externally,will look best to the really educated
eye, that most fully confirms the laws upon which its perfection as an
instrument lies.”
Jo Ann Clark
PhD candidate
University of Waterloo
Canada
☺ depends upon G :
columnar growth : G+
equiaxed growth : G-
subscripts : T - thermal
K - kinetic
R - curvature
C - constitutional or solutal
columnar : DTT = 0
dendritic : DTK ~ 0
pure metal : DTC = 0
large R : DTR ~ 0
Origin - theories
- constitutional supercooling (Winegard and Chalmers, 1954)
- big bang (Chalmers, 1963)
- dendrite arm remelting (Jackson, Hunt et al., 1966)
- crystals from free surface (Southin, 1967)
- grain refiners
B. Chalmers,
“The structure of ingots”
The Journal of the Australian Institute of
Metals, 8(3), 255-263, 1963