Abstract :
Nucleation near the gas-liquid critical point depends sensitively on whether the
pressure or the volume is fixed. We consider near-critical fluids close to the
coexistence curve, (i) Upon decompression to a constant pressure with a fixed
boundary temperature, bulk nucleation can well be induced from a gas state,
whereas from a liquid state boiling is easily triggered in the thermal diffusion
layer near the boundary. In this case, bulk nucleation in a metastable gas is
described by the classical Lifshitz-Slyozov theory, (ii) Upon cooling of the
boundary temperature under the fixed-volume condition, bulk nucleation can be
realized in a liquid and a modified Lifshitz-Slyozov theory follows. However, if
a gas is cooled from the boundary at a fixed volume, liquid droplets readily
appear in the thermal diffusion layer, apparently suggesting no metastability in
a gas in agreement with previous experiments, (iii) On the other hand, if a
liquid is heated at the boundary wall, boiling readily occurs both at a fixed
volume and at a fixed pressure.
Keywords :
nucleation. , boiling , adiabatic effects , gas-liquid transition