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4 - Classical Theory of Multicomponent Nucleation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 May 2024

Steven L. Girshick
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota
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Summary

The classical theory of multicomponent nucleation, including binary nucleation, ternary nucleation, etc., makes similar key assumptions as in CNT for single-component nucleation. Clusters are modeled as spherical liquid droplets consisting of an ideal multicomponent solution. The surface tension is assumed to equal that of a flat surface of liquid having the same composition, in equilibrium with its multicomponent vapor. The Gibbs free energy of cluster formation is a function of the cluster’s size and composition and of the gas-phase partial pressures of each component. The critical size and composition are found at a saddle point on the multidimensional free energy surface, where the free energy of cluster formation is a maximum in one direction and a minimum in all orthogonal directions. Several improvements have been proposed within the framework of classical theory. These include models of the cluster growth trajectory near the critical point; studies that account for composition-dependent surface tension; and models that consider the existence of surface-active layers that cause the chemical composition near the cluster surface to be different than in the core.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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