In a diffusion-controlled interaction, the Kirkendall plane, identified by inert particles placed at the initial interface between the reactants, need not be unique. The Kirkendall plane can microstructurally (spatially) be stable as well as unstable, and can, under predictable circumstances, bifurcate and even trifurcate. The movement of the Kirkendall markers during the interaction can be rationalized using the classical diffusion theory in terms of the Kirkendall velocity construction. The position of a Kirkendall plane is revealed in the reaction zone not only by the presence of inert markers, but also by a different crystal morphology developed on either side of the plane. The role of the Kirkendall plane in the morphogenesis of multip...