Influence of morphological instability on grain boundary trajectory during directional solidification

The interplay between the diffusion-controlled dynamics of a solidification front and the trajectory of a grain boundary groove at the solid-liquid interface is studied by means of thin-sample directional solidification experiments of a transparent alloy, and by numerical simulations with the phase-field method in two dimensions. We find that low-angle grain boundaries (subboundaries) with an anisotropic interfacial free energy grow tilted at an angle $\theta_t$ with respect to the temperature gradient axis. $\theta_t$ remains essentially equal to its value imposed at equilibrium as long as the solidification velocity $V$ remains low. When $V$ increases and approaches the cellular instability threshold, $\theta_t$ decreases, and eventually vanishes when a steady-state cellular morphology forms. The absence of mobility of the subboundary in the solid is key to this transition. These findings are in good agreement with a recent linear-stability analysis of the problem.