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Dynamics of phase separation of metastable crystal surfaces by surface diffusion: A phase-field study. | LitMetric

Dynamics of phase separation of metastable crystal surfaces by surface diffusion: A phase-field study.

Phys Rev E

Laboratoire de Physique de la Matière Condensée, CNRS, Ecole Polytechnique, Institut Polytechnique de Paris, 91120 Palaiseau, France.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new phase-field model is developed to study surface diffusion in crystals with uneven surface energy, showing it can simplify to a sharp-interface equation when the interface width is very small.
  • - The model reveals that when a metastable crystal surface evolves, the process of nucleation and growth can create new surface domains that lead to a more structured hill-and-valley shape, differing from the random patterns seen in typical thermal nucleation.
  • - The study also finds specific growth patterns during coarsening, including a characteristic length scale that grows over time following a scaling law and a junction density that decreases in a predictable manner, highlighting how induced nucleation affects phase separation in crystals.

Article Abstract

A new phase-field approach is designed to model surface diffusion of crystals with strongly anisotropic surface energy. The model can be shown to asymptotically converge toward the sharp-interface equation for surface diffusion in the limit of vanishing interface width. It is employed to investigate the dynamical evolution of a thermodynamically metastable crystal surface. We find that nucleation and growth by surface diffusion of the newly formed surface induce the formation of additional stable surfaces at its wake. This induced nucleation mechanism is found to produce domains composed of several stable surfaces of prescribed width. The domains propagate on the crystal surface and then coalesce to form a hill-and-valley structure. The resulting morphology is more regular than the typical hill-and-valley surface produced by random thermal nucleation, i.e., when motion-by-curvature controls the phase separation dynamics. Moreover, the induced nucleation mechanism is found to be peculiar to surface diffusion and to dominate the phase separation at high degree of metastability. Once the hill-and-valley structure is formed, coarsening operates by motion and elimination of facet junctions, points where two facets merge to form one and we find the following scaling law L∼t^{1/6}, for the growth in time t of the characteristic length scale L during this coarsening stage. The density of junctions is found to exhibit a t^{-2/3} regime. Our results elucidate the role of the induced nucleation mechanism on the dynamics of interfacial phase separation and corroborate surface faceting experiments on ceramics.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.110.034803DOI Listing

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