“…Another important property of the nonautonomous finite-thickness phase is its melting point. If early papers [75,78,80,81,117,118] provided discussion that the melting temperature of surface (nonautonomous) phases may differ from the melting temperature of volume phases of the same composition, the recent papers generally consider only the value of these differences and expressions describing the dependence of the melting temperature of different nonautonomous phases on certain parameters [13,15,95,[97][98][99]108,214]. Information on the component distribution between the nonautonomous and volume phases, which makes it possible to predict the material properties and behavior over a wide temperature range, is of great importance for the analysis of polycrystalline and other disperse systems [78,79,117].…”