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Nucleation and Growth

The document discusses the concepts of nucleation and growth during phase transformations. It begins by explaining that phase transformations involve the transformation of a homogeneous solution into a mixture of two phases. It then discusses the factors that determine whether a solution will separate into phases, including entropy and enthalpy. The document goes on to explain the concepts of nucleation, critical nuclei size, and how the number of nuclei can be calculated based on statistical entropy considerations.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
96 views15 pages

Nucleation and Growth

The document discusses the concepts of nucleation and growth during phase transformations. It begins by explaining that phase transformations involve the transformation of a homogeneous solution into a mixture of two phases. It then discusses the factors that determine whether a solution will separate into phases, including entropy and enthalpy. The document goes on to explain the concepts of nucleation, critical nuclei size, and how the number of nuclei can be calculated based on statistical entropy considerations.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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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

• ∆Gmix is composed of entropic (-T∆Smix) and enthalpic (∆Hmix) parts

• 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

• Note: in all cases as T increases, entropy becomes more important, so at


very high temperatures, solutions are usually favored

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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

• As T increases, homogeneous solution is favored

• Tc, the consulate temperature is the point above which solution is


favored

• Behavior described by a series of G vs. composition curves at


different temperatures
Inflection points and minima plotted on T vs. comp. Diagram

• Spinodals from inflection points

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Spinodal Decomposition
• A continuous phase transformation
Initially, small composition changes that are wide-ranging
Give interpenetrating microstructure (2 continuous phases)

• No thermodynamic barrier to phase separation


One phase separates into two
Infinitesimal composition changes lower the system free energy

• Very important in glass and liquids


Vycor
Liquid-liquid phase separation

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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
1

• Volume transformations

Volume Fraction Transformed


α to β phase transformation 0.8

Avrami equation 0.6

Vβ is the volume of second phase


0.4
V is system volume
Iv is the nucleation rate 0.2

u is the growth rate


t is time 0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1

Sigmoidal transformation curves Normalized Time of Reaction

• Infinitesimal changes raise system free energy

5
Volume Energy
• ∆Gv is ∆Grxn (energy/volume) times the new phase volume

• Spherical clusters have the minimum surface area/volume ratio

• So: the volume term can be:

( 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

∆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

• Surface energy is important for small particles


10000

∆P (atm)
• Nuclei are on the order of 100 molecules

• More generally, surface energy is given by: 5000

 ∂G 
γ = 
 ∂A  T, P, composition 0
0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10
Radius (µm)

WS2002 Where: A is the surface area of the particle, bubble, etc. 7

7
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

• We can estimate the free energy change


as a function of the radius of the nuclei Nucleation

from the volume and surface terms 4 10-13 2


Surface Term (~x )
3
Volume Term (~x )
Sum of Surface and Volume

• When r is small, surface dominates 2 10-13


∆ G*

∆G (J)
0 100
• When r is large, volume dominates r*

-2 10-13
• r* is the inflection point
T To -4 10-13

0 2 10- 8 4 10- 8 6 10- 8 8 10- 8 1 10- 7


∆T = T0 − T β phase stable α phase stable
Radius (m)
∆T

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Increasing Temperature

8
Nucleation
• r* is the critical size nucleus and inflection point on the curve
∂ ( ∆G r )
At r*: =0
∂r

• We can use this to calculate r* and ∆Gr*


2γ 16πγ 3
r* = − ∆G* =
∆G v 3( ∆G v ) 2

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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

• Substituting the previous equations and solving gives

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  

Where: ∆Gn is the free energy for cluster formation


Nr is the number of clusters of radius r per unit volume
N is the number of molecules per unit volume

• At equilibrium, Nr <<N so the previous equation simplifies to:

 ∆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 

• As the degree of undercooling increases, the thermodynamic


driving force increases, but atomic mobility decreases
Nucleation Rate

Thermo Kinetic
Driving Limitation
Force

∆T
To ∆T increasing
T increasing

kT  ∆G m   16πγ 3To2 
I = Ns exp −  N exp − 
WS2002 h  kT  2 2
 3( ∆T) ( ∆H rxn ) kT 12

12
Heterogeneous Nucleation
• In many cases (some argue all cases), nucleation occurs at a
surface, interface, impurity, or other heterogeneities in the system

• The energy required for nucleation is reduced by a factor related to


the contact angle of the nucleus on the foreign surface

∆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  

Where: u = growth rate per unit area of interface


ao = distance across the α-β interface (~ 1 atomic dia.)
∆Gm = activation energy for mobility or diffusion
ν = frequency factor
kT
ν=
3πa 3o η

Where: η is atomic mobility of viscosity


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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

• Implications for tailoring microstructure


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