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Review Progress in Ostwald ripening theories and their applications to nickel-base superalloys - Part I: Ostwald ripening theories

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 11, Pages 2171-2202

Publisher

KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL
DOI: 10.1023/A:1015388912729

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The physical basis behind the Ostwald ripening process for two-phase mixture has been reviewed in detail, using the various theories developed to describe this process. The Ostwald ripening, also termed second phase coarsening, is generally thought to be slow, diffusion-controlled process which occurs subsequent to phase separation under extremely small under-saturation levels. The major advance for the description of this process was made when Lifshitz, Slyozov and Wagner (also known as the LSW theory) published their papers more than fourty years ago. This classical LSW theory predicts that the ripening kinetics and the particle size distribution function are applicable to dilute systems only [i.e. when the volume fraction (Q) of second phase approaces zero: Q --> 0], in which particle-particle interactions are not important. After the publication of the LSW theory, many experimentalists tested the veracity of the theory. Experimentalists have confirmed the prediction of self-similar ripening behavior at long times. However, virtually none of the reported distributions are of the form predicted by the LSW theory. The reported distributions are generally broader and more symmetric than the LSW predictions. It was later realized that a major problem with the LSW approach was the mean field nature of the kinetic equation. In order to remove the zero volume fraction assumption of the LSW theory, the many theories have been developed based on the statistically averaged diffusion interaction of a particle of given size class with its surroundings, using both analytic and numerical methods. Many attempts to determine the statistically averaged growth rate of a particle either do not account for the long-range nature of the diffusional field surrounding the particle, and/or employed ad hoc assumptions in an attempt to account for the diffusional interactions between particles. The strength of the diffusional interactions between particles stems from the long range Coulombic nature of the diffusion field surrounding a particle. As a result, particle interactions occur at distances of many particle diameters and restrict the validity of LSW theory to the unrealistic limit of zero volume fraction of coarsening phase. More realistic models of the ripening process at finite-volume fractions (Q) of coarsening phase have been proposed by various workers such as Brailsford-Wynblatt (1979), Voorhees-Glicksman (1983), Marqusee-Rose (1984), Tokuyama-Kawasaki (1984), Enomoto-Tokuyama-Kawasaki (ETK) (1986), and Yao-Elder-Guo-Grant (YEGG) (1993) models. Although a great deal of progress has been made in understanding Ostwald ripening, a fully satisfactory approach has not yet been found, and it has remained a vexing problem in the field. At present, it is very difficult to determine which of these theories best describes coarsening at finite volume fraction. The statistical mechanical theories, developed to describe systems in which Qmuch less than1, employed the same microscopic equation to describe the coarsening rates of individual particles, but different techniques to perform the statistical averaging. In addition, these theories can be distinguished on yet a finer scale. All of the theories predict that the rate constant will vary as Q(1/2) in this low volume fraction limit. These theories predict that the scaled time-independent particle radius distributions become broader and more symmetric than those predicted by LSW as the volume fraction increases. Clearly more experimental and theoretical work is necessary in order to settle the subtle disagreement now existing between the various Ostwald ripening theories. (C) 2002 Kluwer Academic Publishers

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