Growth Mechanism During Directional Solidification on Y-System Superconductors

1992 ◽  
pp. 429-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teruo Izumi ◽  
Yuichi Nakamura ◽  
Tae Hyun Sung ◽  
Yuh Shiohara
2015 ◽  
Vol 242 ◽  
pp. 35-40
Author(s):  
Takashi Sekiguchi ◽  
Ronit R. Prakash ◽  
Karolin Jiptner ◽  
Xian Jia Luo ◽  
Jun Chen ◽  
...  

The grain evolution of multicrystalline Si was studied using the ingot grown from microcrystalline template. The grain shape evolution and width increase are not monotonic but may have 3 stages. On the other hand, the grain boundary (GB) analysis suggests that there exit 2 reactions, namely random GB annihilation at the initial stage and Σ3 generation and annihilation at the steady state.


Author(s):  
Necip Güven ◽  
Rodney W. Pease

Morphological features of montmorillonite aggregates in a large number of samples suggest that they may be formed by a dendritic crystal growth mechanism (i.e., tree-like growth by branching of a growth front).


Author(s):  
H.J. Zuo ◽  
M.W. Price ◽  
R.D. Griffin ◽  
R.A. Andrews ◽  
G.M. Janowski

The II-VI semiconducting alloys, such as mercury zinc telluride (MZT), have become the materials of choice for numerous infrared detection applications. However, compositional inhomogeneities and crystallographic imperfections adversly affect the performance of MZT infrared detectors. One source of imperfections in MZT is gravity-induced convection during directional solidification. Crystal growth experiments conducted in space should minimize gravity-induced convection and thereby the density of related crystallographic defects. The limited amount of time available during Space Shuttle experiments and the need for a sample of uniform composition requires the elimination of the initial composition transient which occurs in directionally solidified alloys. One method of eluding this initial transient involves directionally solidifying a portion of the sample and then quenching the remainder prior to the space experiment. During the space experiment, the MZT sample is back-melted to exactly the point at which directional solidification was stopped on earth. The directional solidification process then continues.


Author(s):  
Jun Jiao

HREM studies of the carbonaceous material deposited on the cathode of a Huffman-Krätschmer arc reactor have shown a rich variety of multiple-walled nano-clusters of different shapes and forms. The preparation of the samples, as well as the variety of cluster shapes, including triangular, rhombohedral and pentagonal projections, are described elsewhere.The close registry imposed on the nanotubes, focuses attention on the cluster growth mechanism. The strict parallelism in the graphitic separation of the tube walls is maintained through changes of form and size, often leading to 180° turns, and accommodating neighboring clusters and defects. Iijima et. al. have proposed a growth scheme in terms of pentagonal and heptagonal defects and their combinations in a hexagonal graphitic matrix, the first bending the surface inward, and the second outward. We report here HREM observations that support Iijima’s suggestions, and add some new features that refine the interpretation of the growth mechanism. The structural elements of our observations are briefly summarized in the following four micrographs, taken in a Hitachi H-8100 TEM operating at an accelerating voltage of 200 kV and with a point-to-point resolution of 0.20 nm.


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