730 research outputs found
Direct Simulations of Homogeneous Bubble Nucleation: Agreement with CNT and no Local Hot Spots
We present results from direct, large-scale molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations of homogeneous bubble (liquid-to-vapor) nucleation. The simulations
contain half a billion Lennard-Jones (LJ) atoms and cover up to 56 million
time-steps. The unprecedented size of the simulated volumes allows us to
resolve the nucleation and growth of many bubbles per run in simple direct
micro-canonical (NVE) simulations while the ambient pressure and temperature
remain almost perfectly constant. We find bubble nucleation rates which are
lower than in most of the previous, smaller simulations. It is widely believed
that classical nucleation theory (CNT) generally underestimates bubble
nucleation rates by very large factors. However, our measured rates are within
two orders of magnitude of CNT predictions - only at very low temperatures does
CNT underestimate the nucleation rate significantly. Introducing a small,
positive Tolman length leads to very good agreement at all temperatures, as
found in our recent vapor-to-liquid nucleation simulations. The critical
bubbles sizes derived with the nucleation theorem agree well with the CNT
predictions at all temperatures. Local hot spots reported in the literature are
not seen: Regions where a bubble nucleation events will occur are not above the
average temperature, and no correlation of temperature fluctuations with
subsequent bubble formation is seen.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Submitted to PRE. Simulation movies available
at http://www.ics.uzh.ch/~diemand/movies
Probing new intra-atomic force with isotope shifts
In the development of atomic clocks, some atomic transition frequencies are
measured with remarkable precision. These measured spectra may include effects
of a new force mediated by a weakly interacting boson. Such effects might be
distilled out from possible violation of a linear relation in isotope shifts
between two transitions, as known as King's linearity, with relatively
suppressed theoretical uncertainties. We discuss the experimental sensitivity
to a new force in the test of the linearity as well as the linearity violation
owing to higher order effects within the Standard Model. The sensitivity to new
physics is limited by such effects. We have found that for Yb, the higher
order effect is in the reach of future experiments. The sensitivity to a heavy
mediator is also discussed. It is analytically clarified that the sensitivity
becomes weaker than that in the literature. Our numerical results of the
sensitivity are compared with other weak force search experiments.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures; published versio
Simple improvements to classical bubble nucleation models
We revisit classical nucleation theory (CNT) for the homogeneous bubble
nucleation rate and improve the classical formula using a new prefactor in the
nucleation rate. Most of the previous theoretical studies have used the
constant prefactor determined by the bubble growth due to the evaporation
process from the bubble surface. However, the growth of bubbles is also
regulated by the thermal conduction, the viscosity, and the inertia of liquid
motion. These effects can decrease the prefactor significantly, especially when
the liquid pressure is much smaller than the equilibrium one. The deviation in
the nucleation rate between the improved formula and the CNT can be as large as
several orders of magnitude. Our improved, accurate prefactor and recent
advances in molecular dynamics simulations and laboratory experiments for argon
bubble nucleation enable us to precisely constrain the free energy barrier for
bubble nucleation. Assuming the correction to the CNT free energy is of the
functional form suggested by Tolman, the precise evaluations of the free energy
barriers suggest the Tolman length is independently of the
temperature for argon bubble nucleation, where is the unit length of
the Lenard-Jones potential. With this Tolman correction and our new prefactor
one gets accurate bubble nucleation rate predictions in the parameter range
probed by current experiments and molecular dynamics simulations.Comment: 10pages, 6figures, Accepted for publication in Physical Review
Free energy of cluster formation and a new scaling relation for the nucleation rate
Recent very large molecular dynamics simulations of homogeneous nucleation
with Lennard-Jones atoms [Diemand et al. J. Chem. Phys. {\bf
139}, 074309 (2013)] allow us to accurately determine the formation free energy
of clusters over a wide range of cluster sizes. This is now possible because
such large simulations allow for very precise measurements of the cluster size
distribution in the steady state nucleation regime. The peaks of the free
energy curves give critical cluster sizes, which agree well with independent
estimates based on the nucleation theorem. Using these results, we derive an
analytical formula and a new scaling relation for nucleation rates: is scaled by , where the supersaturation ratio is ,
is the dimensionless surface energy, and is a dimensionless
nucleation rate. This relation can be derived using the free energy of cluster
formation at equilibrium which corresponds to the surface energy required to
form the vapor-liquid interface. At low temperatures (below the triple point),
we find that the surface energy divided by that of the classical nucleation
theory does not depend on temperature, which leads to the scaling relation and
implies a constant, positive Tolman length equal to half of the mean
inter-particle separation in the liquid phase.Comment: 7 figure
Pure iron grains are rare in the universe
The abundant forms in which the major elements in the universe exist have
been determined from numerous astronomical observations and meteoritic
analyses. Iron (Fe) is an exception, in that only depletion of gaseous Fe has
been detected in the interstellar medium, suggesting that Fe is condensed into
a solid, possibly the astronomically invisible metal. To determine the primary
form of Fe, we replicated the formation of Fe grains in gaseous ejecta of
evolved stars by means of microgravity experiments. We found that the sticking
probability for formation of Fe grains is extremely small; only several atoms
will stick per hundred thousand collisions, so that homogeneous nucleation of
metallic Fe grains is highly ineffective, even in the Fe-rich ejecta of Type Ia
supernovae. This implies that most Fe is locked up as grains of Fe compounds or
as impurities accreted onto other grains in the interstellar medium
Bubble Evolution and Properties in Homogeneous Nucleation Simulations
We analyze the properties of naturally formed nano-bubbles in Lennard-Jones
molecular dynamics simulations of liquid-to-vapor nucleation in the boiling and
the cavitation regimes. The large computational volumes provide a realistic
environment at unchanging average temperature and liquid pressure, which allows
us to accurately measure properties of bubbles from their inception as stable,
critically sized bubbles, to their continued growth into the constant speed
regime. Bubble gas densities are up to 50 lower than the equilibrium vapor
densities at the liquid temperature, yet quite close to the gas equilibrium
density at the lower gas temperatures measured in the simulations: The latent
heat of transformation results in bubble gas temperatures up to 25 below
those of the surrounding bulk liquid. In the case of rapid bubble growth -
typical for the cavitation regime - compression of the liquid outside the
bubble leads to local temperature increases of up to 5, likely significant
enough to alter the surface tension as well as the local viscosity. The
liquid-vapor bubble interface is thinner than expected from planar coexistence
simulations by up to . Bubbles near the critical size are extremely
non-spherical, yet they quickly become spherical as they grow.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review E,
now matches published versio
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