Abstract
Grain boundaries (GBs) whose energy is larger than twice the energy of the solid-liquid interface exhibit the premelting phenomenon, for which an atomically thin liquid layer develops at temperatures slightly below the bulk melting temperature. Premelting can have a severe impact on the structural integrity of a polycrystalline material and on the mechanical high-temperature properties, also in the context of crack formation during the very last stages of solidification. The triple junction between a dry GB and the two solid-liquid interfaces of a liquid layer propagating along the GB cannot be defined from macroscopic continuum properties and surface tension equilibria in terms of Young’s law. We show how incorporating atomistic scale physics using a disjoining potential regularizes the state of the triple junction and yields an equilibrium with a well-defined microscopic contact angle. We support this finding by dynamical simulations using a multiphase field model with obstacle potential for both purely kinetic and diffusive conditions. Generally, our results should provide insights on the dynamics of GB phase transitions, of which the complex phenomena associated with liquid metal embrittlement are an example.
- Received 1 June 2021
- Revised 11 October 2021
- Accepted 21 October 2021
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.225701
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