Abstract

The thermodynamics of surface-stimulated crystal nucleation demonstrates that if at least one of the facets of the crystal is only partially wettable by its melt, then it is thermodynamically more favorable for the nucleus to form with that facet at the droplet surface rather than within the droplet. So far, however, the kinetic aspects of this phenomenon had not been studied at all. In the present paper, a kinetic theory of homogenous crystal nucleation in unary droplets is proposed by taking into account that a crystal nucleus can form not only in the volume-based mode (with all its facets within the droplet) but also in the surface-stimulated one (with one of its facets at the droplet surface). The theory advocates that even in the surface-stimulated mode crystal nuclei initially emerge (as subcritical clusters) homogeneously in the subsurface layer, not "pseudo-heterogeneously" at the surface. A homogeneously emerged subcritical crystal can become a surface-stimulated nucleus due to density and structure fluctuations. This effect contributes to the total rate of crystal nucleation (as the volume-based mode does). An explicit expression for the total per-particle rate of crystal nucleation is derived. Numerical evaluations for water droplets suggest that the surface-stimulated mode can significantly enhance the per-particle rate of crystal nucleation in droplets as large as 10 microm in radius. Possible experimental verification of the proposed theory is discussed.

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