Options
How peritectic melting forms bicontinuous microstructures
Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.15039
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2025-05-01
Sprache
English
TORE-DOI
Journal
Volume
289
Article Number
120917
Citation
Acta Materialia 289: 120917 (2025)
Publisher DOI
Scopus ID
Publisher
Elsevier
Fine-scale porous or bicontinuous microstructures may be prepared by liquid-metal dealloying (LMD). Reverse peritectic reactions, and specifically the peritectic melting of TiAg, have been proposed as dealloying-like processes that produce quite similar microstructures but avoid the restrictions on sample size inherent in LMD. Here, studies of the microstructure evolution during peritectic melting of TiAg suggest a formation mechanism that is not LMD-like but rather relies on the migration of liquid films. The process starts with wetting of the TiAg grain boundaries by the alloy melt. Successively, both Ti and Ag continue to dissolve from one side of the wetted boundary, while β-Ti deposits on the opposite side and the liquid film sweeps the pristine TiAg crystal. TiAg-Ti interfaces with well-defined orientation relationship and with concentration gradients support this picture, as does the phase morphology in partially decomposed samples. The process generates a bicontinuous structure with a solid Ti skeleton, interpenetrated by the Ag-rich melt. The bicontinuity is conserved even after coarsening. Upon quenching, the Ti phase transforms to α-Ti. This study clarifies the mechanism of peritectic melting in TiAg, and it may provide a basis for identifying other alloy systems suitable for producing bicontinuous microstructures by that process.
Subjects
Bicontinuous structure | Dealloying | Liquid film migration | Peritectic melting | TiAg alloy
DDC Class
660: Chemistry; Chemical Engineering
530: Physics
620.1: Engineering Mechanics and Materials Science
Publication version
publishedVersion
Loading...
Name
1-s2.0-S1359645425002095-main.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
4.38 MB
Format
Adobe PDF