Experimental studies of crystal nucleation: metals and colloids
Diter M. Herlach, Thomas Palberg

TL;DR
This paper explores crystal nucleation in metals and colloids using containerless techniques, analyzing the process through classical theory and demonstrating colloids as effective models for studying nucleation phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces advanced containerless processing methods for nucleation studies and validates colloidal suspensions as models for metal crystallization.
Findings
Demonstrated the effectiveness of containerless techniques in nucleation studies.
Determined interfacial energies in colloids using in situ optical and X-ray methods.
Supported colloids as models for understanding metal nucleation processes.
Abstract
Crystallization is one of the most important phase transformations of first order. In the case of metals and alloys, the liquid phase is the parent phase of materials production. The conditions of the crystallization process control the as-solidified material in its chemical and physical properties. Nucleation initiates the crystallization of a liquid. It selects the crystallographic phase, stable or meta-stable. Its detailed knowledge is therefore mandatory for the design of materials. We present techniques of containerless processing for nucleation studies of metals and alloys. We demonstrate the power of these methods for crystal nucleation of stable solids but in particular also for investigations of crystal nucleation of metastable solids at extreme undercooling. This concerns the issue of heterogeneous versus homogeneous nucleation and non-equilibrium conditions. The results are…
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