Eutectic Colony Formation: A Stability Analysis
Mathis Plapp, Alain Karma

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the stability of eutectic solidification fronts, incorporating ternary impurities, revealing oscillatory instabilities and large-scale microstructure formations supported by experimental evidence.
Contribution
It extends the stability analysis of binary eutectics to include ternary impurities, introducing a new understanding of oscillatory modes and effective interface modeling.
Findings
Identification of oscillatory instability modes due to ternary impurities
Large-scale oscillatory microstructures observed experimentally
Effective monophase interface formulation for stability analysis
Abstract
Experiments have widely shown that a steady-state lamellar eutectic solidification front is destabilized on a scale much larger than the lamellar spacing by the rejection of a dilute ternary impurity and forms two-phase cells commonly referred to as `eutectic colonies'. We extend the stability analysis of Datye and Langer for a binary eutectic to include the effect of a ternary impurity. We find that the expressions for the critical onset velocity and morphological instability wavelength are analogous to those for the classic Mullins-Sekerka instability of a monophase planar interface, albeit with an effective surface tension that depends on the geometry of the lamellar interface and, non-trivially, on interlamellar diffusion. A qualitatively new aspect of this instability is the occurence of oscillatory modes due to the interplay between the destabilizing effect of the ternary impurity…
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