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The stability of the shape of a moving planar liquid-solid interface during the unidirectional freezing of a dilute binary alloy is theoretically investigated by calculating the time dependence of the amplitude of a sinusoidal perturbation of infinitesimal amplitude introduced into the planar shape. The calculation is accomplished by using gradients of the steady-state thermal and diffusion fields satisfying the perturbed boundary conditions (capillarity included) to determine the velocity of each element of interface, a procedure justified in some detail. Instability occurs if any Fourier component of an arbitrary perturbation grows; stability occurs if all components decay. A stability criterion expressed in terms of growth parameters and system characteristics is thereby deduced and is compared with the currently used stability criterion of constitutional supercooling; some very marked differences are discussed.
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W. W. Mullins
University of California, San Diego
Robert F. Sekerka
Material Measurement Laboratory
Journal of Applied Physics
Harvard University Press
Carnegie Institution for Science
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Mullins et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0379b2f6e56700b001d6be — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1713333