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Effects of high-temperature ultrasonic melt treatment on microstructural evolution and precipitation kinetics in Al–Cu alloys

Authors
Song, GaeunNa, HyeinKim, Soo-BaeHwang, DaWeonOh, MinsikLee, EunsolLee, Jung-MooJung, In-HoKang, Sung-GyuCho, Young-HeeChoi, In-Suk
Issue Date
Apr-2026
Publisher
Elsevier Inc.
Keywords
Al–10 wt% Cu alloys; Compositional homogeneity; Cooling rate; Precipitation behavior; Ultrasonic melt treatment
Citation
Materials Characterization, v.234
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Materials Characterization
Volume
234
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82633
DOI
10.1016/j.matchar.2026.116149
ISSN
1044-5803
1873-4189
Abstract
Ultrasonic melt treatment (UST) has been proposed as a promising approach to engineer microstructures of metallic materials by injecting high-intensity ultrasonic waves into molten metal, enabling porosity control and refinements of grains and dendrites. Here, we show that applying high-temperature UST (∼100 °C above the liquidus) to Al–10 wt% Cu alloys—despite the absence of grain refinement—still altered dendritic evolution and downstream precipitation behavior by promoting extensive solute homogenization in the liquid. Under rapid quenching, UST produced uniform dendritic morphologies and precipitation behavior, with fine θ’ (Al2Cu) precipitates and a sharp aging peak. In contrast, non-UST alloys exhibited bimodal dendritic structures and broad aging responses. Even at slower cooling rates, UST further suppressed dendritic variability and improved precipitation-hardening uniformity. The observed changes in dendritic spacing and precipitation kinetics can be directly rationalized using the Al–Cu phase diagram together with classical nucleation theory. These findings emphasize the importance of molten-state solute homogenization induced by high-temperature UST, offering a scientifically grounded and industrially viable pathway to property-consistent aluminum castings within a short processing window.
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Kang, Sung-Gyu
대학원 (나노신소재융합공학과)
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