Nucleation and Growth
Nucleation and Growth
• Goal
Understand the basic thermodynamics behind the nucleation
and growth processes
• References
Handout
Ch. 8, Intro. to Ceramics by Kingery, Bowen and Uhlmann
Most books on glasses and glass-ceramics
• Homework
None
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Phase Transformations
• Considered as a transformation of a homogeneous solution to a mixture
of two phases
• For a stable solution, ∆Gmix is less than zero. In other words, the solution
is more stable than the individual components
• Consider
1. ∆Hmix less than zero: stable solution
2. ∆Hmix = zero (ideal solution), stable solution due to entropic
3. ∆Hmix slightly greater than zero: stable solution entropy dominates
4. ∆Hmix >> 0: enthalpy dominates, phase separation occurs
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Phase separation
• If ∆Hmix is greater than zero, the overall ∆Gmix can be greater than
zero meaning that phase separation is favored
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Spinodal Decomposition
• A continuous phase transformation
Initially, small composition changes that are wide-ranging
Give interpenetrating microstructure (2 continuous phases)
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Nucleation and Growth
• Important for:
Phase transitions, precipitation, crystallization of glasses
Many other phenomena
• Nucleation has thermodynamic barrier Vβ π
= I v u3t 4
• Initially, large compositional change V 3
Small in size Nucleation and growth
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• Volume transformations
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Volume Energy
• ∆Gv is ∆Grxn (energy/volume) times the new phase volume
( volume ) ∆G v or
4 πr 3 ∆G
3 v
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Surface Energy
• The LaPlace equation shows the importance of surface energy
2γ
∆P =
r
Where: ∆P is the pressure drop across a curved surface
γ is the surface energy LaPlace Equation/Kelvin Effect
15000
r is particle radius
∆P (atm)
• Nuclei are on the order of 100 molecules
∂G
γ =
∂A T, P, composition 0
0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10
Radius (µm)
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Nucleation
• Consider the nucleation of a new phase at a temperature T
The transition temperature (T) is below that predicted by
thermodynamics when surface or volume are not considered
∆G (J)
0 100
• When r is large, volume dominates r*
-2 10-13
• r* is the inflection point
T To -4 10-13
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Increasing Temperature
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Nucleation
• r* is the critical size nucleus and inflection point on the curve
∂ ( ∆G r )
At r*: =0
∂r
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Critical Nuclei
• The number of molecules in the critical nucleus, n*, can be
calculated by equating the volume of the critical nucleus, 4/3π(r*)3,
with the volume of each molecule, V, times the number of
molecules per nucleus
4
π( r*) 3 = n * V
3
32πγ 3
n* = −
3V( ∆G v ) 3
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Nucleus Formation
• The number of nuclei can be calculated using statistical entropy
Nr Nr N N
∆G n = Nr ∆G r + kT ln + ln
N + Nr N + Nr N + Nr N + Nr
∆G *
Nr* = N exp −
kT
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Nucleation Rate
• The nucleation rate, I, is then the product of a thermodynamic
barrier described by Nr* and a kinetic barrier given by the rate of
atomic attachment
∆G* kT ∆G m
I = N exp − NS h exp − kT
kT
Thermo Kinetic
Driving Limitation
Force
∆T
To ∆T increasing
T increasing
kT ∆G m 16πγ 3To2
I = Ns exp − N exp −
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3( ∆T) ( ∆H rxn ) kT 12
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Heterogeneous Nucleation
• In many cases (some argue all cases), nucleation occurs at a
surface, interface, impurity, or other heterogeneities in the system
∆G*het = ∆G*hom o f ( θ )
( 2 + cos θ )( 1 − cos θ ) 2
f (θ) =
4
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Growth
• Compared to nucleation, growth is relatively simple
Assume that stable nuclei exist prior to growth
Add molecules to a stable cluster
Driven by free energy decrease of phase change
Kinetically limited
∆G m
u = νa o 1 − exp −
kT
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Summary
• The thermodynamic driving force for both nucleation and growth increases
as undercooling increases, but both become limited by atomic mobility
Growth Nucleation
I and u Rate
I II III
IV
To ∆T increasing ∆T
T increasing
• As we cool from the reaction temperature To we find 4 regions:
Region I, α is metastable, no β grows since no nuclei have formed
Region II, mixed nucleation and growth
Region III, nucleation only
Region IV, no nucleation or growth due to atomic mobility
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