Issue 16, 1996

Unstable supersaturated solutions of gases in liquids and nucleation theory

Abstract

Limiting supersaturations for dissolved gases manifested by gas evolution oscillators and by direct experiments cannot be accounted for by the application of classical nucleation theory (CNT). The theory predicts bubbles containing 104–105 molecules at nucleation, with Helmholtz energies of ca. 104kT per bubble, much too high for homogeneous nucleation to occur spontaneously in a finite time. We investigate alternative unstable structures (‘blobs’) which do not have well-defined interfaces, which may exist transiently at the point of nucleation as the precursors of true bubbles and which circumvent the need for a large Helmholtz energy for their formation. Effects due to global or local depletion of the solution concentration at nucleation are also considered.

Article information

Article type
Paper

J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., 1996,92, 2843-2849

Unstable supersaturated solutions of gases in liquids and nucleation theory

P. G. Bowers, K. Bar-Eli and R. M. Noyes, J. Chem. Soc., Faraday Trans., 1996, 92, 2843 DOI: 10.1039/FT9969202843

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