We analyzed the columnar solidification of a binary alloy under the influence of an electromagnetic forced convection of various types and investigated the influence of a rotating magnetic field on segregation during directional solidification of Al-Si alloy as well as the influence of a travelling magnetic field on segregation during solidification of Al-Ni alloy through directional solidification experiments and numerical modeling of macrosegregation. The numerical model is capable of predicting fluid flow, heat transfer, solute concentration field, and columnar solidification and takes into account the existence of a mushy zone. Fluid flows are created by both natural convection as well as electromagnetic body forces. Both the experiments and the numerical modeling, which were achieved in axisymmetric geometry, show that the forced-flow configuration changes the segregation pattern. The change is a result of the coupling between the liquid flow and the top of the mushy zone via the pressure distribution along the solidification front. In a forced flow, the pressure difference along the front drives a mush flow that transports the solute within the mushy region. The channel forms at the junction of two meridional vortices in the liquid zone where the fluid leaves the front. The latter phenomenon is observed for both the rotating magnetic field (RMF) and traveling magnetic field (TMF) cases. The liquid enrichment in the segregated channel is strong enough that the local solute concentration may reach the eutectic composition.
During the solidification of metal alloys, chemical heterogeneities at the scale of the product develop. It is referred to as "macrosegregation". Numerical simulation tools exist in the industry. However, their predictive capabilities are not validated and are still limited. A 2D numerical benchmark is presented, based on the solidification of metallic Pb-Sn alloys. Concerning the numerical benchmark, a "minimal" common model of solidification is assumed, including columnar growth without undercooling, fixed solid, isotropic permeability of the mushy region, local thermodynamic equilibrium, lever-rule assumption for the local average composition. We focus our attention on the numerical method used to solve the average conservation equations: Finite Volume, Finite Element, Velocity-Pressure coupling treatment, scheme for convective terms, etc. At this stage of the work, we cannot exhibit a reference solution. However we draw some conclusions on the effects of the grid dependency, in particular on the location and sizes of the segregate channels. The development of both thermally and solutal driven convections in the first stage of the process (cf. low Prandtl and high Lewis numbers) and the relative independency of the convective scheme are also discussed. This presentation also have the goal to call other contributors to join this benchmark [1] in order to enrich the exercise and to reach a reference solution for this important problem in metallurgy.
A three-phase volume averaged equiaxed model is applied to simulation of an experiment on solidification of the binary alloy Sn-10wt% Pb subjected to the electromagnetic stirring. The experiment, whose description was published earlier, was performed in a parallelepiped cavity under controlled cooling conditions and with real-time two-dimensional temperature measurement over a lateral surface of the cavity co-planar with direction of solidification. Applied numerical model treats motion of the liquid and equiaxed grains whose growth kinetics is taken into account and uses a double time step scheme to accelerate solution. Growth
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.