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Crystal Nucleation in Binary Hard Sphere Mixtures

Electronic Theses of Indian Institute of Science

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Field Value
 
Title Crystal Nucleation in Binary Hard Sphere Mixtures
 
Creator Rao, G Srinivasa
 
Subject Crystal Nucleation
Binary Hard Sphere Mixtures - Crystal Nucleation
Hard Sphere Systems
Crystal Nucleation Theories
Monte-Carlo Molecular Simulation
Classical Nucleation Theory (CNT)
Chemical Physics
 
Description Homogeneous crystal nucleation in binary hard sphere mixtures is an active area of research for last two decades. Although Classical nucleation theory (CNT) gives a qualitative picture, it fails at high super saturations because of the following reasons. CNT assumes that the cluster formed is spherical in shape, its properties can be modeled using the bulk properties of the stable solid phase and the interfacial free energy γ between the nucleus and the surrounding metastable fluid is equal to the planar surface tension between two phases at coexistence. These assumptions get increasingly tenuous at higher degrees of super saturations where the critical nucleus formed is microscopic in size leading to breakdown in the predictions of CNT. In addition direct experimental observation of critical nucleus is very difficult because,
1. Critical nucleus is microscopic in size, consisting of few hundreds of particles.
2. Formation of critical cluster is very rare (typically of the order of 101– 106nuclei/cm3/s)
3. Its life time is very short (it either rapidly grows to form a solid phase or melts back to fluid)
In these circumstances molecular simulations are an attractive tool to study the crystal nucleation, because in these simulations microscopic size critical nucleus properties can be calculated. However, brute force molecular dynamic (MD) simulation techniques to study the homogeneous crystal nucleation is currently not feasible due to long times involved. Hence, an indirect approach is needed. In this work, Monte Carlo Abstract v
(MC) molecular simulation techniques are used to calculate free energy barrier height during the crystal nucleation. Phase behavior of Binary hard sphere mixtures with varying ratios of smaller diameter to larger diameter (α) is very similar to that of binary organic liquids. By studying the crystal nucleation in hard sphere system, the physics behind the nucleation for binary organic liquids can be understood. This is the key motivation to study the homogeneous crystal nucleation in binary hard sphere mixtures using MC simulations. Simulations were done using umbrella sampling in combination with local bond order analysis for the identification of crystal nuclei and to compute shape and height of nucleation barrier. Parallel tempering scheme of Geyer and Thomson was utilized to sample phase space more efficiently. Parallel tempering technique was implemented using Message passing interface (MPI) libraries. By using all the above Monte-Carlo simulation techniques, nucleation barrier was calculated during crystallization of binary hard sphere mixtures under the moderate degrees of super cooling in Isothermal-Isobaric semi grand ensembles.
Crystal nucleation in binary hard sphere mixtures has been studied for size ratios α = 0.85, 0.42 and 0.43. For α=0.85, phase diagram contains eutectic point. In this system, the effect of eutectic composition on the nucleation barrier height was observed, by calculating nucleation barriers at various fluid mixture compositions keeping Laplace pressure constant. It is observed that as the fluid mixture composition move towards the eutectic point, free energy barrier height, surface tension and critical cluster sizes are increased and the nucleation rate is drastically decreased by a factor of 10-31. Thus the difficulty of homogenous crystal nucleation increases near the eutectic point. For α=0.42 and 0.43 in the hard sphere system, compound solids such as AB and AB2 solids are stable respectively. In these systems crystal nucleation study was done to observe the compound solid formation. It is observed that in these systems crystallization kinetics are very slow and more advanced simulation techniques need to be developed in order to study crystal nucleation.
 
Contributor Punnathanam, Sudeep N
 
Date 2018-03-05T20:50:24Z
2018-03-05T20:50:24Z
2018-03-06
2012
 
Type Thesis
 
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/2005/3239
http://etd.ncsi.iisc.ernet.in/abstracts/4100/G25560-Abs.pdf
 
Language en_US
 
Relation G25560