Effect of variable thermal conductivity on isotherms in Bridgman growth
Abstract
A change in thermal conductivity associated with melting or solidification can have a profound influence on the isotherms near the solidification interface if the material is being directionally solidified in an ampoule whose walls carry a substantial portion of the heat. This analysis was prompted by a recent discovery that the thermal conductivity of Hg 1-xCd xTe increased dramatically as the material is heated above the solidus curve. An illustrative example is shown in which the sample is approximated as an infinite cylinder with constant but different thermal properties in the solid and melt. The boundary conditions are fixed on the surface by a conductive ampoule in a two-zone Bridgman furnace with an adiabatic region separating the two zones. The effect of the adiabatic zone in this case is to intensify the curvature of the interface rather than to lessen it.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Crystal Growth
- Pub Date:
- May 1983
- DOI:
- 10.1016/0022-0248(83)90205-1
- Bibcode:
- 1983JCrGr..61..707N
- Keywords:
-
- Bridgman Method;
- Crystal Growth;
- Directional Solidification (Crystals);
- Temperature Effects;
- Thermal Conductivity;
- Isotherms;
- Mercury Cadmium Tellurides;
- Microgravity Applications;
- Space Commercialization;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer