23 October 2007

Spinodal Decomposition

Spinodal decomposition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is being considered for deletion in accordance with Wikipedia's deletion policy.
Please share your thoughts on the matter at this article's entry on the Articles for deletion page.
Feel free to edit the article, but the article must not be blanked, and this notice must not be removed, until the discussion is closed. For more information, particularly on merging or moving the article during the discussion, read the guide to deletion.

Steps to list an article for deletion: 1. {{subst:afd}} 2. {{subst:afd2|pg=Spinodal decomposition|cat=|text=}} ~~~~ (categories) 3. {{subst:afd3|pg=Spinodal decomposition}} (add to top of list) 4. Please consider notifying the author(s) by placing {{subst:adw|Spinodal decomposition}} ~~~~ on their talk page(s).
This article does not cite any references or sources. (September 2007)
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed.
The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject.
Please help improve the article with a good introductory style.

Spinodal decomposition is a method by which a mixture of two or more materials can separate into distinct regions with different material concentrations. This method differs from nucleation in that phase separation due to spinodal decomposition occurs throughout the material, and not just at nucleation sites.

[edit] 1 Spinodal region of the phase diagram

Phase separation occurs whenever a material transitions into the unstable region of the phase diagram. The boundary of the unstable region is found by performing a common tangent construction of the free-energy diagram. This boundary is also sometimes called the binodal. Inside the binodal is a region called the spinodal, which is found by determining where the curvature of the free-energy curve is negative. The binodal and spinodal meet at the critical point. It is when a material is moved into the spinodal region of the phase diagram that spinodal decomposition can occur.[1]

To reach the spinodal region of the phase diagram, a transition must take the material through the binodal region or the critical point. Often phase separation will occur via nucleation during this transition, and spinodal decomposition will not be observed. To observe spinodal decomposition, a very fast transition, often called a quench, is required to move from the stable to the spinodally unstable region of the phase diagram.

[edit] 2 The dynamics of spinodal decomposition

In the spinodal region of the phase diagram, the free-energy can be lowered by allowing the components to separate, thus increasing the relative concentration of a component material in a particular region of the material. The concentration will continue to increase until the material reaches the stable part of the phase diagram. Very large regions of material will change their concentration slowly due to the amount of material which must be moved. Very small regions will shrink away due to the energy cost in maintaining an interface between two dissimilar component materials.

To initiate a homogeneous quench a control parameter, such as temperature, is abruptly and globally changed. For a binary mixture of A-type and B-type materials, the Landau free-energy

F=\int\!\!dx\, \frac{A}{2}\phi^2+\frac{B}{4}\phi^4 + \frac{\kappa}{2}\left(\nabla\phi\right)^2\;.

is a good approximation of the free-energy near the critical point and is often used to study homogeneous quenches. The mixture concentration φ = ρA − ρB is the density difference of the mixture components, the control parameters which determine the stability of the mixture are A and B, and the interfacial energy cost is determined by κ.

Diffusive motion often dominates at the length-scale of spinodal decomposition. The equation of motion for a diffusive system is

\partial_t\phi=\nabla ( m\nabla\mu + \xi(x) )\;,

where m is the diffusive mobility, ξ(x) is some random noise such that \langle\xi(x)\rangle=0, and the chemical potential μ is derived from the Landau free-energy:

\mu=\frac{\delta F}{\delta \phi}=A\phi+B\phi^3-\kappa \nabla^2 \phi\;.

We see that if A < 0, small fluctuations around φ = 0 have a negative effective diffusive mobility and will grow rather than shrink. To understand the growth dynamics, we disregard the fluctuating currents due to ξ, linearize the equation of motion around φ = φin and perform a Fourier transform into k-space. This leads to

\partial_t\tilde{\phi}(k,t)=-m((A + 3B\phi_{in}^2)k^2 + \kappa k^4)\tilde{\phi}(k,t)=R(k)\tilde{\phi}(k,t)\;,

which has an exponential growth solution:

\tilde{\phi}(k,t) = \exp(R(k)t)\;.

Since the growth rate R(k) is exponential, the fastest growing angular wavenumber

k_{sp} = \sqrt{\frac{-(A+3B\phi_{in}^2)}{2\kappa}}\;,

will quickly dominate the morphology. We now see that spinodal decomposition results in domains of the characteristic length scale called the spinodal length:

\lambda_{sp} = \frac{2\pi}{k_{sp}} = 2\pi\sqrt{\frac{2\kappa}{-(A+3B\phi_{in}^2)}}\;.

The growth rate of the fastest growing angular wave number is

R(k_{sp})=-m((A + 3B\phi_{in}^2)k_{sp}^2 + \kappa k_{sp}^4)=\frac{m(A+3B\phi_{in}^2)^2}{4\kappa} = \frac{1}{t_{sp}}

where tsp is known as the spinodal time.

The spinodal length and spinodal time can be used to nondimensionalize the equation of motion, resulting in universal scaling for spinodal decomposition.

[edit] 3 References

1. ^ Jones, Richard A. L.. Soft Condensed Matter. Oxford University Press, 33. ISBN 0198505892. Retrieved on 2007-10-22.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinodal_decomposition"

This page was last modified 19:19:56, 2007-10-22. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

Edit this page | Watch this page | Discuss this page | Page history | What links here | Related changes
| Move this page

Main Page | About Wikipedia |
Find:

This page was last modified 19:19:56, 2007-10-22. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.

No comments: