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Evolution of a Polydisperse Ensemble of Spherical Particles in a Metastable Medium with Allowance for Heat and Mass Exchange with the Environment

Journal

CRYSTALS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cryst12070949

Keywords

phase transformations; spherical particles; metastable media; nucleation; growth and dissolution of crystals; particle-size distribution; metastability reduction

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [20-08-00199]
  2. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation [FEUZ-2020-0057]

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Motivated by various applications in physics and materials science, this article presents a generalized approach to the evolution of a polydisperse ensemble of spherical particles in metastable media. The governing equations, including a kinetic equation for the particle-size distribution and a balance equation for the temperature (concentration) of the medium, are formulated. The theory can describe phase transformations and the solutions of the equations are discussed.
Motivated by a wide range of applications in various fields of physics and materials science, we consider a generalized approach to the evolution of a polydisperse ensemble of spherical particles in metastable media. An integrodifferential system of governing equations, consisting of a kinetic equation for the particle-size distribution function (Fokker-Planck type equation) and a balance equation for the temperature (concentration) of a metastable medium, is formulated. The kinetic equation takes into account fluctuations in the growth/reduction rates of individual particles, the velocity of particles in a spatial direction, the withdrawal of particles of a given size from the metastable medium, and their source/sink term. The heat (mass) balance equation takes into account the growth/reduction of particles in a metastable system as well as heat (mass) exchange with the environment. A generalized system of equations describes various physical and chemical processes of phase transformations, such as the growth and dissolution of crystals, the evaporation of droplets, the boiling of liquids and the combustion of a polydisperse fuel. The ways of analytical solution of the formulated integrodifferential system of equations based on the saddle-point technique and the separation of variables method are considered. The theory can be applied when describing the evolution of an ensemble of particles at the initial and intermediate stages of phase transformation when the distances between the particles are large enough, and interactions between them can be neglected.

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