论文标题
液体金属交易期间的微观结构模式形成:相位模拟和理论分析
Microstructural pattern formation during liquid metal dealloying: Phase-field simulations and theoretical analyses
论文作者
论文摘要
近年来,液态金属Dealloying(LMD)已成为一种有希望的物质加工方法,用于生成微型和纳米级双连续或多孔结构。大多数先前的研究都集中在交易材料过程的实验表征和交易材料的特性上,使理论研究不完整,无法完全了解LMD的基本机制。在本文中,我们使用理论模型和相位模拟来阐明LMD期间的动力学和模式形成。我们的研究始于对二进制前体合金1D溶解的理论分析,该分析揭示了一维溶解过程涉及两个制度。在第一个方案中,由于熔体中一个元素之一的溶解度较低,它在固定液体界面上积聚,从而降低了溶解动力学。在第二个制度中,界面动力学达到了固定状态,其中前体合金的两个要素都溶解在熔体中。先前的作品表明,在早期交易阶段,交易阵线的界面是由界面的旋转分解稳定的,这会触发相互联系的韧带的形成。我们通过提出线性稳定性分析来预测在交易行的初始阶段形成的韧带的初始长度尺度来扩展这一工作。将此分析与此处提出的1D溶解模型相结合,使我们能够更好地了解导致平面溶解的初始条件(组成和熔体的组成),而无需界面不稳定。最后,我们报告了固态扩散对与众不同的研究的强烈影响,这在先前的研究中被忽略了。尽管固态扩散率是比液相小的四个数量级,但发现它会影响溶解动力学和韧带形态。
In recent years, liquid metal dealloying (LMD) has emerged as a promising material processing method to generate micro and nano-scale bicontinuous or porous structures. Most previous studies focused on the experimental characterization of the dealloying process and on the properties of the dealloyed materials, leaving the theoretical study incomplete to fully understand the fundamental mechanisms of LMD. In this paper, we use theoretical models and phase-field simulations to clarify the kinetics and pattern formation during LMD. Our study starts from a theoretical analysis of the 1D dissolution of a binary precursor alloy, which reveals that the 1D dissolution process involves two regimes. In the first regime, due to the low solubility of one of the elements in the melt, it accumulates at the solid-liquid interface, which reduces the dissolution kinetics. In the second regime, the interface kinetics reaches a stationary regime where both elements of the precursor alloy dissolve into the melt. Previous works revealed that in the early dealloying stage, the dealloying front is destabilized by an interfacial spinodal decomposition, which triggers the formation of interconnected ligaments. We extend this line of work by proposing a linear stability analysis able to predict the initial length-scale of the ligaments formed in the initial stage of the dealloying. Combining this analysis with the 1D dissolution model proposed here enables us to better understand the initial conditions (composition of the precursor alloy and the melt) leading to a planar dissolution without interface destabilization. Finally, we report a strong influence of solid-state diffusion on dealloying that was overlooked in previous studies. Although the solid-state diffusivity is four to five orders of magnitude smaller than in the liquid phase, it is found to affect both dissolution kinetics and ligament morphologies.