Growth of needle-shaped crystals in the presence of convection

Abstract
The motion of the freezing front between a needle-shaped crystal and a supercooled liquid is analyzed for situations where there is forced convection aligned with the crystal axis. It is shown that in the absence of capillary effects the shape of the crystal-melt interface is a paraboloid of revolution, similar to that found in situations where diffusion is the sole heat-transfer mechanism. A relation between the supercooling, the product of tip velocity and tip radius, and the strength of the flow is derived which reduces to the well-known Ivantsov theory in the absence of convection.