Abstract
The application of the Young-Laplace equation to a solid-liquid interface is considered. Computer simulations show that the pressure inside a solid cluster of hard spheres is smaller than the external pressure of the liquid (both for small and large clusters). This would suggest a negative value for the interfacial free energy. We show that in a Gibbsian description of the thermodynamics of a curved solid-liquid interface in equilibrium, the choice of the thermodynamic (rather than mechanical) pressure is required, as suggested by Tolman for the liquid-gas scenario. With this definition, the interfacial free energy is positive, and the values obtained are in excellent agreement with previous results from nucleation studies. Although, for a curved fluid-fluid interface, there is no distinction between mechanical and thermal pressures (for a sufficiently large inner phase), in the solid-liquid interface, they do not coincide, as hypothesized by Gibbs.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 191102 |
| Journal | Journal of Chemical Physics |
| Volume | 153 |
| Issue number | 19 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 21 2020 |
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