Abstract: | GaSb:Te and GaInSb samples have been solidified under microgravity conditions during the D2 Spacelab mission. Experimental design and parameters are described. Analysis of the thermal data taken during the flight, associated to numerical simulations of heat transfer in the experiment, with the help of FIDAP, gave the experimental conditions (thermal gradients and growth rate). Quantitative chemical analyses of the samples show a chemical segregation characteristic of strong mixing in the melt during crystal growth. Silica crucibles with an internal screw thread groove on the inner wall were used in order to get dewetting of samples from the crucible. It was therefore supposed that Marangoni convection on the free surface associated to the groove might have been the source of convection. This hypothesis has been studied by numerical simulation using FIDAP and the velocity field obtained is in agreement with a strong perturbation of the solutal boundary layer ahead the solid-liquid interface. This can explain the observed chemical segregation. |