A Thermodynamic Analysis of Enhanced Metastability in Isochoric Supercooled Liquids
TLDR
This paper thermodynamically proves that isochoric conditions enhance supercooling stability by reducing the driving force for solidification, suppressing nucleation.
Key contributions
- Derived an inequality for nucleation stability under constant volume using Helmholtz thermodynamics.
- Proved isochoric conditions reduce the thermodynamic driving force for solidification compared to isobaric.
- Explained how this reduced driving force suppresses nucleation rates in supercooled liquids.
- Introduced a dimensionless stability number, computable from bulk data, to compare liquid metastability.
Why it matters
This paper provides a fundamental thermodynamic explanation for enhanced supercooling stability under constant volume. It offers a new, computable metric to compare metastable liquid stability across different materials and conditions, which is crucial for material science and engineering applications.
Original Abstract
Experiments show that isochoric (constant-volume) conditions enhance supercooling stability relative to isobaric (constant-pressure) conditions. Here, combining Helmholtz equilibrium thermodynamics with a first-order perturbation methodology, we derive an inequality governing nucleation stability under volumetric constraint. The derivation provides a general thermodynamic proof that for any substance undergoing phase transformation in which the solid is less dense than the liquid, the Helmholtz driving force for solidification in isochoric systems is smaller than the Gibbs driving force in isobaric systems. Since nucleation rates depend exponentially on the inverse square of the driving force, this provides a thermodynamic basis for the observed suppression of nucleation rates. While a full stochastic treatment is beyond the scope of this work, the reduction in driving force implies a weakening of the bias toward growth of pre-critical fluctuations, increasing their probability of thermal dissolution. The analysis yields a dimensionless isochoric stability number. This number is computable from bulk thermodynamic data alone and provides a geometry-independent criterion for comparing metastable liquid stability across materials and conditions.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.