Issue 42, 2025

The missing billions in hard sphere nucleation

Abstract

The crystallisation of a metastable liquid is an everyday phenomenon, yet it still presents a number of puzzles. One such puzzle is the discrepancy between the crystallisation rate observed in experiments and that predicted by theory: the experimental and simulated rate densities for hard spheres – the “simplest” system showing a first-order freezing transition – disagree by up to 22 orders of magnitude. Nevertheless, it is precisely the utilisation of elementary model systems that facilitates the resolution of these enigmas. We present a comprehensive experimental investigation into the crystallisation of colloidal hard spheres at the particle level. Our ground breaking findings challenge the prevailing conceptualisation of crystal nucleation, elucidate the discrepancy between experiment and theory, and propose an alternative description.

Graphical abstract: The missing billions in hard sphere nucleation

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Aug 2025
Accepted
02 Oct 2025
First published
06 Oct 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Soft Matter, 2025,21, 8100-8111

The missing billions in hard sphere nucleation

S. Kale, A. Lederer and H. J. Schöpe, Soft Matter, 2025, 21, 8100 DOI: 10.1039/D5SM00776C

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