Hot tears have been induced during the solidification of a succinonitrile-acetone alloy by pulling the columnar dendrites in the transverse direction with a pulling stick. The opening of the mushy zone (hot tears) always occurred at grain boundaries. At low volume fraction of solid, the opening can be compensated by leaner-solute interdendritic liquid (i.e., "healed" hot tears). At higher volume fraction of solid, hot tears directly nucleate in the interdendritic liquid or develop from pre-existing micropores induced by solidification shrinkage. Their surface (edge) is made of secondary dendrite arms, which have not yet bridged, but a few spikes have also been observed. These later spikes formed either by the necking of solid bridges established across the grain boundaries prior to pulling, or by the sudden break-up of the liquid film during pulling. Similar spikes have been found by SEM on the hot tear surface of an aluminium-copper alloy.
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