Post
by Bernd » Fri Jul 18, 2025 2:29 pm
Hi materialmoop,
Now you changed everything to the worse. You removed nucleation of phase 2, and you assigned the background phase 0 to BCC...
If you want to simulate a solid state transformation like fcc-->martensite (at least this is what I understood), you should not use phase 0 for one of the solid phases. The reason is that phase 0 is always isotropic and automatically present everywhere as background to the initial grain settings. Then, phase 0 is included but not used. A good template for that would be the Application "Example A004_Gamma_Alpha_TQ.dri".
However, as phase 0 is the background phase, you must provide that your initial microstructure completely overwrites the domain. If you want to start with an initial grain structure of phase 1 (fcc) only, you can do that (like in A004_Gamma_Alpha_TQ.dri) with deterministic initial grains using the Voronoi construction, or also by random initial microstructures. In any case, you must make sure that there is no remaining liquid phase present. This can be done by making the grain radii sufficiently large. Please check with DP_MICRESS before proceeding to anything else!
Then, when it comes to nucleation, you should have at least one seed_type for nucleation of phase 2 (on interfaces, triple junctions or in the bulk). It is important that the temperature interval and the checking interval of the seed_type are chosen such as to allow nucleation at the expected temperatures. The grain radius of the new phase (martensite) should be typically chosen as 0, which means that only a "small grain", i.e. one grid cell with a fraction of 2 times the minimum phase fraction, is set. If you chose large grain sizes (bigger than the grid size), you risk numerical problems, because the new phase automatically will assume the composition of the background (to avoid mass balance violation).
The interface thickness should be chosen to 2.5-4 cells, higher values unnecessarily reduce your effective resolution.
I will not be at work during the next week. Please note that answers from my side to follow-up questions will take longer.
Best wishes
Bernd