Abstract
The solid/liquid interfacial energies of pure metals and metallic alloys are modelled in this paper. A simple model is offered for pure metals, showing that their solid/liquid interfacial energy (sigma) slightly increases with temperature. Sigma for metallic alloys is considered for the interface between solid and liquid solutions being in thermodynamic equilibrium, calculated by the CALPHAD method. The Butler equation is extended to find the equilibrium composition of the solid/liquid interfacial region and the solid/liquid interfacial energy at fixed temperatures. This method takes into account the segregation of low-interfacial energy components to the solid/liquid interfacial region. It is shown how the new method can be extended to multi-component alloys. The method is applied to calculate the solid/liquid interfacial energy of Al-rich solid solutions in equilibrium with eutectic liquid alloys of Al–Cu, Al–Ni, Al–Ag and Al–Ag–Cu systems. Good agreement was found with experimental values. For the Al–Ag–Cu system, the modelled value allows to select the more probable experimental value from the two contradicting experimental values published in the literature. The solid/liquid interfacial energy is calculated for the eutectic Ag–Cu system as function of liquidus composition (which determines both the equilibrium solidus composition and the equilibrium temperature). Finally it is claimed that using solely bulk thermodynamic data (melting enthalpy and molar volumes of pure components and molar excess Gibbs energies of equilibrium solid and liquid solutions) it is possible to provide meaningful values for the temperature and concentration dependence of solid/liquid interfacial energies of alloys. The method can be applied for simulation of solid/liquid phase transformation and also to solid/liquid equilibrium calculations of nano-alloys.
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Introduction
Solid/liquid interfacial energy (sigma) of alloys [1,2,3] is an important thermodynamic property needed to model both nucleation [4,5,6,7,8,9] and grain growth, i.e. the evolution of the microstructure of alloys [10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]. The same quantity is essential in producing nano-structured materials [22,23,24], to calculate solid/liquid equilibrium phase diagrams for nano-systems [25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39] or even to predict dissolution kinetics [40]. Since the pioneering experimental work of Turnbull and Cech [41] measurement techniques and interpretation theories have been constantly developed [42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55], it is still a challenge to measure solid/liquid interfacial energy of alloys of any composition [56,57,58,59,60,61,62,63]. As a consequence, the development of a reliable thermodynamic method is needed. Although there are quite a number of methods developed to model sigma for one-component metals [64,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84,85] and for alloys [86,87,88,89,90,91,92], including the ab initio methods [93,94,95,96,97,98], segregation is taken into account only in some of them [87, 89].
The goal of this paper is to develop a new model for the solid–liquid interfacial energy of alloys taking into account segregation and to check its validity against experimental values. The present paper is an extension of the method developed by the present author earlier for liquid/liquid and for solid/solid coherent interfacial energies [99], being itself an extension of the Butler equation [100]. The Butler equation (originally designed [100] and applied [101,102,103,104,105,106,107,108] for liquid surfaces) has been recently rederived [109, 110] and applied to different other interfaces [111,112,113]. The present model is similar to the previous models [87, 89], but it is worked out here in more details.
The general framework of the model
Let us consider a binary A–B system at standard pressure of 1 bar and at a temperature T (K) in a two-phase region when a solid solution of composition \( x_{B,S} \) keeps equilibrium with a liquid solution of composition \( x_{B,L} \), where \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \) (both dimensionless) are the mole fractions of component B in the solid solution (subscript “S”) and in the liquid solution (subscript “L”), respectively, with the solid and liquid phases separated by a macroscopic planar (and not curved) solid/liquid interface. The goal in the present paper is to develop a method to calculate the concentration and temperature dependence of the solid/liquid interfacial energy.
In the simplest case of the phase diagram type shown in Fig. 1a, temperature will define both equilibrium values \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \). Then, whatever is the average composition of the alloy in the range between \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \), the solid/liquid interfacial energy will have a constant value at given temperature, as shown in Fig. 1b. Outside this concentration range, the solid/liquid interfacial energy is not defined. The goal of the present paper is to work out an equation for the T dependence of the solid/liquid interfacial energy as shown in Fig. 1b.
The equilibrium between the bulk phases
The equilibrium compositions of the phases (\( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \)) follow from the condition of heterogeneous equilibrium:
where \( \mu_{i,S} \) (J/mol) is the chemical potential of component i in the solid solution, while \( \mu_{i,L} \) (J/mol) is the same in the liquid solution. For a binary A–B system described by the regular solution model, the following two equations should be solved simultaneously for \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \) at given \( T \) and other fixed parameters:
where \( \mu_{A,S}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the standard chemical potential of a pure component A in the solid state, \( \mu_{A,L}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the same in the liquid state, \( \mu_{B,S}^{o} \) and \( \mu_{B,L}^{o} \) (J/mol) are the same for component B, R = 8.3145 J/molK is the universal gas constant, T (K) is the absolute temperature, \( L_{0,L} \) (J/mol) is the zeroth-order interaction energy for the liquid solution in the Redlich–Kister formalism, being the same as the interaction energy in the regular solution model and \( L_{0,S} \) (J/mol) is the same for the solid solution. Equation (1a, b) has the following simple analytical solution for the ideal solutions (\( L_{0,L} = L_{0,L} = 0 \)):
Figure 1a is drawn by Eq. (1c–f) using parameters: \( \mu_{A,L}^{o} - \mu_{A,S}^{o} = 8 \cdot \left( {1000 - T} \right) \) and \( \mu_{B,L}^{o} - \mu_{B,S}^{o} = 20 \cdot \left( {2000 - T} \right) \), as an example.
The equilibrium at the solid/liquid interface
In Fig. 2, a system containing a bulk solid solution and a bulk liquid solution with an interface between them is shown schematically. The width of the interface is not defined in this paper. It is only defined that it has a special equilibrium mole fraction of component B, denoted as \( x_{B,S/L} \), being generally different from both \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \).
According to the general model of the partial interfacial energy of a component, it is calculated as the change of the chemical potential of the given component accompanying the transport of the same component from the bulk phase to the interfacial region divided by the molar interfacial area of the same component [100, 109]. In case of two condensed phases surrounding the given interface, the average value calculated from the two bulk phases is taken as [109]:
where \( \sigma_{i} \) (J/m2) is the partial solid/liquid interfacial energy of component i (i = A or B in the binary A–B system), \( \Delta \mu_{i,S} \) (J/mol) is the change of the chemical potential of component i accompanying the transport of this component from the bulk solid phase to the interfacial region, \( \Delta \mu_{i,L} \) (J/mol) is the change of the chemical potential of component i accompanying the transport of this component from the bulk liquid phase to the interfacial region and \( \omega_{i} \) (m2/mol) is the molar interfacial area of component i. The two chemical potential changes are defined as:
where \( \mu_{i,S/L} \) (J/mol) is the chemical potential of component i in the S/L interfacial region, \( \mu_{i,S} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk of the solid phase and \( \mu_{i,L} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk of the liquid phase. Substituting Eq. (2a, b) into Eq. (2):
The chemical potentials in the two bulk phases are written by the following usual expressions:
where \( \Delta G_{i,S}^{E} \) (J/mol) is the partial molar excess Gibbs energy of component i in the solid solution and \( \Delta G_{i,L}^{E} \) (J/mol) is the same in the liquid solution. The chemical potential of the component in the S/L interfacial region is written by a similar equation:
where \( \mu_{i,S/L}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the standard chemical potential of the pure component i in the solid/liquid interfacial region, \( x_{i,S/L} \) (dimensionless) is the mole fraction of component i in the solid/liquid interfacial region and \( \Delta G_{i,S/L}^{E} \) (J/mol) is the partial excess Gibbs energy of component i in the solid/liquid interfacial region. Substituting Eq. (4a–c) into Eq. (3), after some rearrangements:
where \( \sigma_{i}^{o} \) (J/m2) is the solid/liquid interfacial energy of the pure component i, defined as:
The \( \sigma_{i}^{o} \) and \( \omega_{i} \) values are temperature dependent. In the best-case scenario, they are known for each pure substance, or they can be found by modelling. For the two-component A–B system, the mole fraction of component B is written as \( x_{B} \), while that of component A is written as \( \left( {1 - x_{B} } \right) \). Substituting these values into Eq. (5), the partial solid/liquid interfacial energies of components A and B are obtained as:
The bulk equilibrium mole fractions \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,L} \) follow from bulk equilibrium of the solid and liquid phases and can be read from the phase diagram at given temperature as shown in Fig. 1a and Eq. 1c–f. The equilibrium mole fraction in the interfacial region \( x_{B,S/L} \) can be found by extending the Butler equation for the solid/liquid interface [100, 109, 110]:
Substituting Eq. (7a, b) into the right-hand side of Eq. (8), the equilibrium value of \( x_{B,S/L} \) can be found. Substituting this value back into any of Eq. (7a, b), the solid/liquid interfacial energy is obtained, in agreement with Eq. (8). To perform this calculation, the excess partial Gibbs energies are usually described by the Redlich–Kister polynomials, using different interaction energies for solid and liquid solutions obtained from a CALPHAD assessment for the given system.
The application of the present model to ideal solutions
Equations (7, 8) have analytical solution only if both solid and liquid solutions are taken as ideal \( \left( {L_{0,S} = L_{0,S} = 0} \right) \) and if the atomic sizes and interfacial arrangements of the two components are equal \( \left( {\omega_{A} = \omega_{B} = \omega } \right) \). In this case, Eq. (7a, b) are rewritten as:
Substituting these equations into the Butler equation Eq. (8) (\( \sigma_{A} = \sigma_{B} \)), the following equation is obtained for \( x_{B,S/L} \):
where \( K_{B,seg} \) (dimensionless) is the segregation coefficient of component B, defined as:
Now, let us apply Eqs. (1c–f, 9c, d) to calculate \( x_{B,L} \), \( x_{B,S} \) and \( x_{B,S/L} \) as function of T for the following model parameters, as an example: \( \mu_{A,L}^{o} - \mu_{A,S}^{o} = 8 \cdot \left( {1000 - T} \right) \), \( \mu_{B,L}^{o} - \mu_{B,S}^{o} = 20 \cdot \left( {2000 - T} \right) \), \( \sigma_{A}^{o} \) = 0.15 J/m2, \( \sigma_{B}^{o} \) = 0.30 J/m2, \( \omega \) = 40,000 m2/mol. The results of calculations for \( x_{B,S/L} \) are shown in Fig. 3. Substituting the values of \( x_{B,S/L} \) found by Eq. (9c, d) into Eqs. (8, 9a, b), the solid/liquid interfacial energy of the alloy is calculated. Repeating the same procedure at different temperatures, the temperature dependence of the interfacial energy is found as shown in Fig. 4. A negative deviation from the additive rule in Fig. 4 is found despite the fact that an ideal solution is considered. It is obviously due to the segregation of component A to the interface. This is because component A is interface-active as it has a lower solid/liquid interfacial energy for its pure state compared to component B. For the same reason, the dotted line corresponding to the composition of the solid/liquid interfacial region deviates from the additive rule towards alloys with higher A content in Fig. 3. This effect of segregation makes our present new method superior compared to previous published models. Let us note that increasing the value of \( K_{B,seg} \) the dotted line in Fig. 3 shifts from the left top corner towards the right bottom corner of the diagram.
On the interaction energies in the solid/liquid interfacial region
The interaction energy in the solid/liquid interfacial region in the first estimation can be calculated as the average of the interaction energies in the liquid phase and in the solid phase:
where \( L_{j,S/L} \) (J/mol) is the jth interaction energy of the components in the solid/liquid interfacial region, \( L_{j,L} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk liquid solution and \( L_{j,S} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk solid solution. Equations (7–8, 10) are the central equations of our new model to estimate the concentration and temperature dependence of solid/liquid interfacial energy of alloys. As an example, in the framework of the regular solution model, when only the zeroth-order interaction energies are used, Eq. (7a, b) can be rewritten using Eq. (10) as:
Looking at Eq. (10a, b) it is more obvious how \( x_{B,S/L} \) can be found by substituting Eq. (10a, b) into Eq. (8) (\( \sigma_{A} = \sigma_{B} \)) at a given set of state parameters (T, \( x_{B,S} \), \( x_{B,L} \)), if the following parameters are known: \( \sigma_{A}^{o} \), \( \sigma_{B}^{o} \), \( \omega_{A} \), \( \omega_{B} \), \( L_{0,S} \), \( L_{0,L} \). Equation (10a, b) are written for the most simple case of the regular solution. Generally Eq. (7a, b) should be used, taking into account Eq. (10) for each interaction energy value.
Extension of the present model to multi-component alloys
Equations (7a, b, 8) can be extended to ternary A–B–C alloys, as well, taking also into account the materials balance equations:
First, the equilibrium compositions of the bulk solid (\( x_{i,S} \)) and bulk liquid (\( x_{i,L} \)) phases are calculated by the CALPHAD method. The equilibrium composition of the solid/liquid interface (\( x_{i,S/L} \)) is calculated by substituting Eq. (11a–c) into different parts of Eq. (11d) (\( \sigma_{A} = \sigma_{B} \) and \( \sigma_{A} = \sigma_{C} \)), taking into account also the materials balance Eqs. (10) and (11g). The equilibrium composition of the interface can be substituted back into Eq. (11a–c) to find the partial solid/liquid interfacial energies, which should be identical within the uncertainty of the numerical method. Their average value provides the requested value for the solid/liquid interfacial energy of the given alloy, in accordance with Eq. (11d).
The same method can be logically extended to higher-order systems, extending further Eqs. (7a, b, 8, 10) for the binary systems and Eqs. (10, 11a–g) for the ternary systems.
The model for pure metals
As follows from the above, the temperature dependences of the solid/liquid interfacial energies and molar interfacial areas of the pure components are needed to model the solid/liquid interfacial energy of multi-component alloys. As these data are usually not available, simple models will be offered herewith. The goal is to connect these missing complex quantities with the simplest and well-known thermodynamic properties, such as melting enthalpy and molar volume of the pure metals.
The present model on interfacial energies will be built using the general definition of Eq. (6) for the solid/liquid interfacial energy of pure components. The two differences in chemical potentials of Eq. (6) are written through the enthalpy and entropy terms as:
where \( H_{i,S/L}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the standard enthalpy of pure component i in the solid/liquid interface region, \( H_{i,S}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk solid phase, \( H_{i,L}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the same in the bulk liquid phase, \( S_{i,S/L}^{o} \) (J/molK) is the standard entropy of pure component i in the solid/liquid interface region, \( S_{i,S}^{o} \) (J/molK) is the same in the bulk solid phase and \( S_{i,L}^{o} \) (J/molK) is the same in the bulk liquid phase.
The enthalpy and entropy differences of Eq. (12a, b) are estimated supposing that the solid/liquid region is liquid-like, adsorbed to the outer plane of the solid crystal. Because of this, the atoms within the crystal have approximately the same freedom as the atoms in its surface, i.e. the entropies of atoms within a crystal and in its surface region are approximately the same:
On the other hand, the atoms within bulk liquid have more freedom to move around compared to the adsorbed liquid atoms along its interface with the solid crystal. Thus, the liquid atoms in the interfacial region lose half of their configurational freedom characteristic for the bulk liquid, leading to the following approximated equation: \( \left( {S_{i,S/L}^{o} - S_{i,L}^{o} } \right) \cong - \frac{1}{2} \cdot \Delta_{m} S_{conf}^{o} \), where \( \Delta_{m} S_{conf}^{o} \) is the configurational part of the melting entropy of a general pure metal. The latter can be approximated as [114]: \( \Delta_{m} S_{conf}^{o} \cong R \cdot ln2 \). (Note that the same expression is valid for the configurational entropy of the equimolar binary solution, but it is just a coincidence.) Substituting this expression into the previous one, the final equation is obtained as:
As the solid/liquid interface is liquid-like, there is almost no cohesion energy change from the liquid side; thus, the following equation is approximately valid:
On the other hand, the cohesion energy within the solid crystal is decreased by the standard melting enthalpy when the atom is transferred from the bulk of the crystal into the liquid-like interfacial region, i.e.:
where \( \Delta_{m} H_{i}^{o} \) (J/mol) is the standard molar enthalpy of melting of a pure component i.
The molar interfacial area of component i is calculated as [115]:
where \( V_{i} \) (m3/mole) is the characteristic molar volume of the pure component i at the solid/liquid interface at given temperature, \( N_{Av} = 6.02\; \times \;10^{23} \) mol−1 is the Avogadro number and \( f \) (dimensionless) is a structural parameter depending on the packing ratios of the bulk phases (f b) and that of the interface (f i). As follows from the above, the solid/liquid interfacial region is liquid-like. Therefore, the molar volume in Eq. (14a) is taken as the molar volume of the pure liquid metal and \( f_{b} \) (the bulk packing fraction) in Eq. (14a) is also taken as the bulk packing fraction of the liquid metal. As was shown in [115], the average value for simple liquid metals (resulting from bcc, fcc and hcp metals) is: \( f_{b} \cong 0.65\; \pm \;0.02 \), being also consistent with the bulk random packing fraction of equal spheres [116, 117]. On the other hand, \( f_{i} \) (the packing fraction in the solid/liquid interface) is taken as the packing fraction of the outer crystal plane of the solid crystal, as the liquid is adsorbed to it. For the most dense crystal plane (such as the 111 plane of the fcc crystal), \( f_{i} \) = 0.906 [115]. Substituting these two latter values into Eq. (14b), \( f \cong \) 1.00. Let us note that anisotropy of interfacial energy is neglected in this paper for simplicity, as it has a small magnitude [118].
In this model, the excess molar volumes of both the solid and liquid solutions are neglected for simplicity, that is why the molar interfacial areas of the components are taken as independent of the composition, and thus, they are taken equal in both Eqs. (5, 6).
The temperature dependence of the molar volumes of fcc metals is known in the liquid state using the following semi-empirical equations [119]:
with semi-empirical parameters a, b, n, c, d given in Table 1 for fcc metals. Substituting Eq. (13a–d) into Eq. (12a, b) and substituting the resulting equation and Eqs. (14a, 15a–b) with \( f \cong \) 1.00 into Eq. (6), the following final equations are obtained:
Equation (16a, b) can be generally written as:
where \( \alpha \) and \( \beta \) (dimensionless) are semi-empirical model parameters. Comparing Eq. (16a, b) with Eq. (16c), the parameter values for our new model are: \( \alpha \) = 0.5, \( \beta \) = 0.173. The melting enthalpies of metals are taken in the first approximation as T-independent quantities from [120]. The T dependence of the solid/liquid interfacial energies of the 10 fcc metals for 0 K and for the melting points is given in Table 1. The T dependences are shown in Fig. 5, calculated by Eq. (16a, b). All modelled values have an uncertainty of ± 10%.
As follows from Eq. (16a–c), interfacial energy of a metal at a fixed temperature is higher for lower molar volume and higher melting point. The interfacial energy increases with melting point, as the melting entropies are approximately constant (especially for the group of fcc metals considered here), and that is why higher melting points mean higher melting enthalpies. This is in agreement with the original approximation of Turnbull [64, 65]. The interfacial energy values for fcc metals range from 43.8 mJ/m2 for Pb at T = 0 K to 468 mJ/m2 for Ir at T = 4000 K. Thus, more than an order of magnitude change is expected in solid/liquid interfacial energies of fcc alloys as function of composition and temperature. This is especially important for nucleation calculations, as the activation energy of nucleation is proportional to the cube of the interfacial energy. Thus, the activation energy of nucleation can change more than 3 orders of magnitudes for fcc metal-based alloys as function of composition and temperature. This shows the importance of the present model.
The validation of the method for some fcc eutectic alloys
As in Table 1 only fcc metals are shown, our method to calculate the solid/liquid interfacial energy of alloys will be validated for fcc alloys. For the purpose of validation high-precision, experimental data are needed, found only for the Al-rich eutectics of the Al–Cu, Al–Ni, Al–Ag and Ag–Al–Cu systems. That is why the reliability of the new method will be checked only for these three binary and one ternary system.
Trial calculations for binary eutectic Al–Cu, Al–Ni and Ag–Al systems
For the Al–Cu system, the solid/liquid interfacial energy between the Al-rich fcc solid solution and the eutectic liquid solution was measured at the eutectic temperature using the grain boundary groove method and the results were found as 163.4 ± 16.2 mJ/m2 [49] and 160.0 ± 19.2 mJ/m2 [52]. The magnitude of anisotropy in solid/liquid interfacial energy in this system is measured below 1% [118]. For the Al–Ni system, the solid/liquid interfacial energy between the Al-rich fcc solid solution and the eutectic liquid solution was measured at the eutectic temperature using the same method and the result was found as 171.6 ± 18 mJ/m2 [52]. For the Al–Ag system, the solid/liquid interfacial energy between the Al-rich fcc solid solution and the eutectic liquid solution was measured at the eutectic temperature using the same method and the results was found as 166.32 ± 21.62 mJ/m2 [121]. These values are used here to validate our model.
The eutectic temperatures and compositions of the Al-rich alloys are taken from [121] (Table 2). The molar surface areas and solid/liquid interfacial energies of the pure components Ag, Al, Cu and Ni are calculated by Eqs. (14a–16a) and by the parameters of Table 1 for given eutectic temperatures as shown in Table 2. The interaction energies for the Al–Cu, Al–Ni and Ag–Al solid fcc and liquid solutions are given in Tables 3, 4 and 5, based on the CALPHAD assessments [123, 124]. Using these interaction energies, the molar integral and partial excess Gibbs energies are calculated for the given A–B binary system, as:
The calculation of the solid/liquid interfacial energies is performed by the numerical solution of Eqs. (7a–b, 8, 10). As given in Table 2, the calculated composition of the solid/liquid interfacial region is richer in Al than the average mole fraction of equilibrium bulk solid and liquid solutions. This is because Al has the lowest interfacial energy compared to Ag, Cu and Ni, and so Al segregates preferentially to the interfacial region. As also given in Table 2, the calculated interfacial energy values deviate only by + 0.8%/+ 2.9%/− 7.0%/+ 3.7% from the 4 measured values for the 3 systems, while both measured and modelled values have an uncertainty of at least 10%. This agreement between the measured and modelled values confirms the validity of the present model.
Trial calculation for the ternary Ag–Al–Cu system
For the Ag–Al–Cu system, the solid/liquid interfacial energy between the Al-rich fcc solid solution and the eutectic liquid solution was measured at the eutectic temperature using the grain boundary groove method and the result was found as: 67 ± 15 mJ/m2 [125] and 137.40 ± 16.49 mJ/m2 [126]. This large difference in experimental values allows us to use our new theoretical method to decide which of the above two contradicting experimental values is closer to reality.
The eutectic temperatures and compositions of the Al-rich alloys are taken from [127] (Table 6). The molar surface areas and solid/liquid interfacial energies of the pure components Ag, Al and Cu are calculated by Eqs. (14a–16a) and by the parameters of Table 1 at the eutectic temperature (Table 6). The interaction energies for binary Al–Cu, Ag–Al, Ag–Cu and for the ternary Ag–Al–Cu systems for solid fcc and liquid solutions are given in Tables 3, 5, 7, 8 based on the CALPHAD assessments [123, 127]. Using these interaction energies, the molar integral and molar partial excess Gibbs energies are calculated for the Ag–Al–Cu system, as:
The solid/liquid interfacial energies are calculated by solving numerically Eqs. (10, 11a–g). As given in Table 6, the calculated composition of the interfacial region is richer in Al and slightly in Ag, and is poorer in Cu compared to the average compositions in the bulk solid and liquid solutions. This is because Al and Ag have similar and low interfacial energies compared to Cu, so Al and Ag are interfacial active in the system. As also given in Table 6, the calculated interfacial energy value is larger by 16.8% compared to the data of [126], but larger by 140% compared to the data of [125]. Thus, our model calculations confirm that the experimental values of [126] are probably much closer to the reality than those of [125]. Although the deviation between calculated and experimental [126] data is larger than for the binary systems above, the possible experimental and theoretical intervals still overlap: the possible modelled interval of 160.5 ± 16 mJ/m2 overlaps with the experimentally found possible interval of 137.40 ± 16.49 mJ/m2 by [126]. This proves again the validity of our new model.
Model calculations for a binary alloy as function of composition and temperature
In this chapter, we calculate the concentration/temperature dependence of the composition and energy for the solid/liquid interfacial region for a binary phase diagram. As the Al–Cu, Al–Ni and Al–Ag binary systems considered in Table 2 all contain intermetallic compounds [122] not considered in this paper, the present calculation will be performed for the eutectic Ag–Cu system with no intermetallic compound [122]. Unfortunately no experimental information on interfacial energies exists for this system to compare our calculated values.
There are three, interconnected quantities in an eutectic phase diagram of Fig. 6a: temperature, liquidus temperature and solidus temperature. The liquidus temperature is selected here as the leading parameter. The other two parameters are calculated by the CALPHAD method, using Eqs. (1, 17a–c) and Table 7. The calculated and measured [122] phase diagrams are very close to each other. The molar surface areas and solid/liquid interfacial energies of the pure components Ag and Cu are calculated by Eqs. (14a–16a) and by the parameters of Table 1 as function of temperature. The interaction energies are given in Table 7 using Eq. (17a–c).
The results of calculations are shown in Fig. 6. The broken line in top Fig. 6 shows the mole fraction of Cu in the solid/liquid interfacial region as function of temperature. The values left from the eutectic point correspond to the equilibrium between the Ag-rich solid solution and the liquid solution, while the values right from the eutectic point correspond to the equilibrium between the Cu-rich solid solution and the liquid solution. One can see that the interfacial region is enriched in Ag if compared to the average solidus and liquidus values at the same temperature. This is because pure Ag has a lower interfacial energy compared to pure Cu, as given in Table 1.
In the bottom part of Fig. 6, the solid/liquid interfacial energy is shown as function of the liquidus mole fraction of Cu. One can see that at the eutectic point the solid/liquid interfacial energies have the same values for Ag-rich and for the Cu-rich solid solutions, keeping equilibrium with the same eutectic liquid. (This is because the partial Gibbs energies of components are identical in these two equilibrium solid solutions.) However, the curve in the bottom part of Fig. 6 is broken in the eutectic point. It also follows from the bottom part of Fig. 6 that the solid/liquid interfacial energy is lower compared to the additive rule shown by a broken straight line. As this seems not be the case for Cu-rich alloys, the same results are shown in Fig. 7 as function of the average solidus and liquidus mole fraction of Cu. As shown in Fig. 7, the modelled values coincide with those calculated by the additive rule in alloys with more than 90 at.% Cu. For all other cases, the modelled values are lower compared to the additive rule. This is explained again by the segregation of Ag to the interfacial region, which follows from the fact that pure Ag has a lower interfacial energy compared to pure Cu (Table 1).
Discussion on the model parameters of Eq. (16c)
The solid/liquid interfacial energy of pure metals is described by the general Eq. (16c). The above model for pure metals provides the semi-empirical values as: \( \alpha \) = 0.5, \( \beta \) = 0.173. The calculated results shown in Tables 2 and 6 are obtained using these values. The experimental and modelled values are compared in Fig. 8. As shown in Fig. 8, the correlation coefficient is negative. This is probably due to the not perfectly selected values of parameters \( \alpha \) and \( \beta \).
All model equations in the literature on solid/liquid interfacial energies of pure metals can be summarized by the general Eq. (6c). However, all literature models provide different values of parameters \( \alpha \) and \( \beta \). Some models claim \( \alpha \) = 0 with some positive value for \( \beta \), some other models claim \( \beta \) = 0 with some positive value of \( \alpha \), while some models provide both parameters with positive values [64,65,66,67,68,69,70,71,72,73,74,75,76,77,78,79,80,81,82,83,84]. As follows from the above, our model with \( \alpha \) = 0.5, \( \beta \) = 0.173 is in the interval of possible values, according to the previous models. Based on the above, let us check how the two boundary conditions with \( \alpha \) = 0 and \( \beta \) = 0 perform, optimizing the other nonzero parameter such that the maximum absolute deviation between experimental and modelled values is minimized.
One of the options is shown in Fig. 9 calculated with parameters: \( \alpha \) = 0.59, \( \beta \) = 0. One can see that the situation in Fig. 9 is not improved compared to Fig. 8. Another option is shown in Fig. 10 calculated with parameters: \( \alpha \) = 0, \( \beta \) = 0.925. One can see that the situation in Fig. 10 is considerably improved compared to Figs. 8 and 9. In this latter case, all the five experimental data of Table 2 and 6 are within ± 6% of deviation compared to the modelled values, which is the real improvement compared to the 16% of difference shown in Table 6. It is clear that if both parameters \( \alpha \) and \( \beta \) are free to optimize, even a better situation can be achieved. However, the five experimental points for the 4 systems are not sufficient to find the generally valid value in this paper. Thus, this topic should be clarified at a later date, based on more numerous and more precise experimental values.
Conclusions
A general method is developed to model the solid/liquid interfacial energies between an equilibrium solid solution and an equilibrium liquid solution. This new method is the extension of the Butler model developed for liquid/gas surfaces and our previous model developed for liquid/liquid and for coherent solid/solid interfaces. The method allows the calculation of the composition of the interfacial region and its interfacial energy, if the excess Gibbs energies of the neighbouring phases are known as function of composition and temperature. The accuracy of the theoretical method is estimated to be around 10%. The method also takes into account segregation of low-interfacial energy components to the interface, and in this way, the new method is superior to previous models.
For the method to apply, the solid/liquid interfacial energies and the molar interfacial areas of the pure components should be known. Simple models are developed in this paper for the 10 pure fcc metals. Further, the excess molar Gibbs energies of equilibrium phases should be known, to be taken from CALPHAD assessments.
The present method is validated on the three binary systems: Al–Cu, Al–Ni and Al–Ag. In all three cases, measured values are known for the interface between Al-rich solid solutions and equilibrium eutectic liquids at the eutectic temperature. The agreement between calculated and experimental values is within 7% for each of the 3 binary systems, confirming the validity of the model.
The method is also extended to multi-component systems. It is validated against experimental data on Al–Ag–Cu system, for the interface between Al-rich fcc solid solution and the equilibrium liquid Al–Ag–Cu solution at the eutectic temperature. Among the two existing experimental values, one can be excluded when compared with our calculated values. The agreement between another experiment and our calculated data is acceptable. (The indicated experimental interval overlaps with our calculated interval if 10% of uncertainty is allowed for the model values.) This confirms further the validity of our method. This agreement can be improved if the semi-empirical parameters are fitted to experimental data.
As a final conclusion, we claim that using solely bulk thermodynamic data (melting enthalpy and molar volumes of pure components and molar excess Gibbs energies of equilibrium solid and liquid solutions) it is possible to provide meaningful values for the temperature and concentration dependence of solid/liquid interfacial energies of alloys.
The present method is claimed to be final for the concentration dependence of solid/liquid interfacial energies between solid and liquid solutions of binary and multi-component alloys if the interfacial energies and molar surface areas of the pure metals and the excess Gibbs energies of the solid and liquid bulk alloys are known. However, further work is needed to improve/extend the method to estimate the solid/liquid interfacial energies of pure fcc and/or non-fcc metals as function of temperature. Also, further effort is needed to extend the present method to the interface between intermetallic compounds and liquid alloys.
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Acknowledgements
This work was financed by the GINOP 2.3.2–15–2016–00027 Project. The author is grateful for the motivating discussion to Liyung Zhang and Yong Du (Central South University, Changsha, China), Stephanie Lippmann (Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany), In-Ho Jung (McGill University, Montreal, Canada), Ely Brosh (NRCN, Beer-Sheva, Israel), as well as to Tamas Mende and Andras Dezso (both University of Miskolc, Hungary).
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After this paper was accepted, the following relevant paper was electronically published: C.Zhang, Y.Du: A novel thermodynamic model for obtaining solid–liquid interfacial energies. Metall Mater Trans A (2017), DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/s11661-017-4365-6.
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Kaptay, G. On the solid/liquid interfacial energies of metals and alloys. J Mater Sci 53, 3767–3784 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10853-017-1778-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10853-017-1778-y