1 - Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2010
Summary
The processes of freezing and melting were present at the beginning of the Earth and continue to affect the natural and industrial worlds. These processes created the Earth's crust and affect the dynamics of magmas and ice floes, which in turn affect the circulation of the oceans and the patterns of climate and weather. A huge majority of commercial solid materials were “born” as liquids and frozen into useful configurations. The systems in which solidification is important range in scale from nanometers to kilometers and couple with a vast spectrum of other physics.
The solidification of a liquid or the melting of a solid involves a complex-interplay of many physical effects. The solid–liquid interface is an active free boundary from which latent heat is liberated during phase transformation. This heat is conducted away from the interface through the solid and liquid, resulting in the presence of thermal boundary layers near the interface. Across the interface, the density changes, say, from ρℓ to ρs. Thus, if ρs > ρℓ, so that the material shrinks upon solidification, a flow is induced toward the interface from “infinity.”
If the liquid is not pure but contains solute, preferential rejection or incorporation of solute occurs at the interface. For example, if a single solute is present and its solubility is smaller in the (crystalline) solid than it is in the liquid, the solute will be rejected at the interface.
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- Theory of Solidification , pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001
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