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Current Topics in Crystal Growth Research   Volumes    Volume 5 
Abstract
Hydrostatic instabilities in floating zone crystal growth process
A. Sanz, I. Martinez, J. Meseguer, J. M. Perales, N. A. Bezdenejnykh
Pages: 27 - 42
Number of pages: 16
Current Topics in Crystal Growth Research
Volume 5 

Copyright © 1999 Research Trends. All rights reserved

ABSTRACT

If only Fluid Mechanics aspects are considered, the configuration appearing in the floating zone technique for crystal growth can be modelled as a mass of liquid spanning between two solid rods. Besides, if now the influence of temperature gradients and heat flow are not considered, the simplest fluid model consists of an isothermal liquid mass of constant properties (density and surface tension) held by capillary forces between two solid disks placed a distance L apart: the so called liquid bridge. As it is well known, if both supporting disks were parallel, coaxial and of the same diameter, 2R, the volume of liquid, V,  were  equal  to  that  of  a  cylinder  of the  same  L  and  R     (V= πR2L) and no body forces were acting on the liquid column, the fluid configuration (under these conditions of cylindrical shape) will become unstable when the distance between the disks equals the length of the circumference of the supporting disks (L=2πR, the so-called Rayleigh stability limit). One should be aware that the Rayleigh stability limit can be dramatically modified when the geometry differs from the above described cylinder (due to having non-coaxial disks, different diameter disks, liquid volume different from the cylindrical one, etc) or when other external effects like accelerations either axial or lateral are considered.

In this paper the stability limits of liquid bridges considering different types of perturbations are reviewed. Available numerical and experimental results, which cover a broader range of parameter variation, as well as analytical expressions for these limits, obtained using asymptotic analyses, are presented.
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