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John W. Cahn

Researcher at National Institute of Standards and Technology

Publications -  175
Citations -  42867

John W. Cahn is an academic researcher from National Institute of Standards and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Grain boundary & Surface energy. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 175 publications receiving 39642 citations. Previous affiliations of John W. Cahn include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & University of Cambridge.

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Dendritic and spheroidal growth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors obtained exact solutions to the diffusion equation which correspond to diffusion controlled growth of elliptical paraboloids (dendrites; forward growth with linear time dependence) and spheroids (growth with square root of time dependence).
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The kinetics of cellular segregation reactions

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that at least two controlling kinetic processes are required to describe such a complex reaction, such as discontinuous precipitation and pearlite formation, in addition to diffusion control, and that the cell boundary moves with a velocity proportional to the net free energy decrease.
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Transformation kinetics during continuous cooling

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that transformations which nucleate heterogeneously will quite often obey a rule of additivity and transform nonisothermally according to simple rate laws which can be calculated from isothermal transformation data.
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Mechanisms of phase transformations within the miscibility gap of Fe-rich Fe-Al alloys

TL;DR: The coherent phase diagram of the Fe-Al system possesses a tricritical point where a line of higher-order transitions ends at a miscibility gap at about 23 at.% Al and 615°C.
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Nucleation on dislocations

TL;DR: In this paper, the activation energy of nucleation of a second phase on a dislocation is calculated, assuming an elastic model of dislocation and an incoherent precipitate, and it is found that the nucleation energy decreases even more rapidly with increasing thermodynamic driving force.