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Influence of convection on free growth of dendrite crystals from solutionThe free growth of dendrites in a uniformly supercooled solution was examined using cine photography with a Schlieren optical system. Crystals were grown in the bulk of the solution from a centrally located capillary tube, nucleated at the interface with a liquid nitrogen cooled wire. Crystals propagated along the tube, the slower growing orientations eliminated, and emerged at the tip, usually growing parallel to the tube direction. For both sodium sulfate decahydrate from its solution and ice from sodium chloride solution, growth rate and fineness of dendrites increased with supercooling. In sodium sulfate, upward convection of the less dense depleted solution occurs; downward convection was observed for the rejected, more concentrated sodium chloride solution. In both cases, there was a spatial and temporal delay in the release of the convective plume from the moving dendrite tip. The role of this convection on the growth characteristics and the production of secondary crystals is examined. A proposed low-g experiment to examine differences in growth rate, crystal texture, and secondary nucleation in a reduced convective regime where molecular diffusion is the dominant transfer process is discussed.
Document ID
19820024201
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Hallett, J.
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Wedum, E.
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV, United States)
Date Acquired
August 10, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1979
Publication Information
Publication: Alabama Univ. UAH(NASA Workshop on Fluids Expt. System
Subject Category
Solid-State Physics
Accession Number
82N32077
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF AER-75-19601
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF ATM-77-07995
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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