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Experiment/Payload OverviewDEvice for the study of Critical LIquids and Crystallization (DECLIC) is a multi-user facility utilized to study transparent media and their phase transitions in microgravity onboard the International Space Station (ISS). The Directional Solidification Insert (DSI) portion of the DECLIC multi-user facility experiment will study a series of benchmark experiments on transparent alloys that freeze like metals under microgravity onboard the International Space Station (ISS) using SCN (succinonitrile-a transparent organic substance in the liquid state that is used to study the phenomena related to solidification processes) based alloys
Principal InvestigatorCentre National d ?Etudes Spatiales (CNES-French Space Agency)
Sponsoring AgencyCentre National d ?Etudes Spatiales (CNES)
Expeditions Assigned|21|22|
Previous ISS MissionsFor supercritical fluids (HTI, ALI), DECLIC is a continuation of one conducted aboard the Mir Space Station and the Space Shuttle. For solidification of transparent model alloys, DECLIC-DSI is the first mission in space environment, following series of intensive studies on ground.
Directional Solidification Insert (DSI) involves the study of directional solidification in relation to transparent model alloys. This involves investigating the birth and growth of morphological instabilities at the solid-liquid interface and the effects of coupling between the solidifying interface and the convection. By observing these phenomena in a microgravity environment, it will be possible to refine the theoretical models and numerical simulation predictions, which will ultimately result in the improvement of the industrial ground-based material development processes. The ambition of the reduced-gravity experiments on ISS, which will consist of directional solidification of SCN-based bulk alloys in the Directional Solidification Insert (DSI) of the DECLIC facility with a systematic variation of the process parameters, is to obtain benchmark data on cellular and dendritic microstructure formation under diffusive transport conditions. Precise measurement of interface shape and geometrical characterization of cellular and dendritic patterns, as well as of individual cell or dendrite will be carried out as a function of time for different values of composition, growth rate and temperature gradient. These measurements will be used in combination with modeling and numerical simulations of the temperature field to establish the physics that govern the dynamics of interface pattern selection, and to quantitatively determine the conditions for the planar to cellular and cellular to dendritic transitions. Optical observations of the solidification front will be done either directly or by interferometry (imaging using the interference fringes resulting from the recombination of reference and object light beams issued from the same coherent source) with the cartridge placed in one arm of a Mach-Zehnder interferometer (a device used to determine phase shifts caused by the solidifying sample which is placed in the optical path of the object beam).
The DECLIC facility provides power, communications, command/control, data storage, and multiple, flexible optical capabilities in support of each experiment. DECLIC-DSI involves investigating the birth and growth of morphological instabilities and the effects of coupling between the solidifying interface and the convection. By observing these phenomena in a microgravity environment, it will be possible to refine the theoretical models and numerical simulation predictions, which will ultimately result in the improvement of the industrial ground-based material development processes.
Earth ApplicationsDECLIC-DSI will establish the fundamental physics that govern the formation and selection of solidification patterns. This will provide an opportunity to gain an insight into the general problem of pattern formation, as solidification patterns are recognized to be similar to those forming in many other branches of science.
In order to adjust the parameters and optimize the scientific results, some data must be downloaded in real-time or near real-time. For complete analysis by the scientists, the data will be retrieved either via telemetry in deferred time, or via the removal of hard disks which will be brought back by the crew. The DECLIC-DSI Experiment is scheduled for a period of 75 days.
Operational ProtocolsThe ISS crew will install the DECLIC hardware into an EXPRESS Rack in the U.S. Laboratory. The DSI insert will be installed into DECLIC for the second run of the series of DECLIC experiments. Crew participation is not required during the run(s). Tape change-out will be required by the crew at some stage during the run(s).
Information Pending
Ames Laboratory senior metallurgist Rohit Trivedi will be studying how crystals, such as these nickel-based superconductors, grow in low gravity experiments on board the International Space Station. Image courtesy of USDOE's Ames Laboratory.