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Stabilization of Undercooled Metals via Passivating Oxide Layers.

Andrew MartinBoyce S ChangAlana M PaulsChuanshen DuMartin M Thuo
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Undercooling metals relies on frustration of liquid-solid transition mainly by an increase in activation energy. Passivating oxide layers are a way to isolate the core from heterogenous nucleants (physical barrier) while also raising the activation energy (thermodynamic/kinetic barrier) needed for solidification. The latter is due to composition gradients (speciation) that establishes a sharp chemical potential gradient across the thin (0.7-5 nm) oxide shell, slowing homogeneous nucleation. When this speciation is properly tuned, the oxide layer presents a previously unaccounted for interfacial tension in the overall energy landscape of the relaxing material. We demonstrate that 1) the integrity of the passivation oxide is critical in stabilizing undercooled particle, a key tenet in developing heat-free solders, 2) inductive effects play a critical role in undercooling, and 3) the magnitude of the influence of the passivating oxide can be larger than size effects in undercooling.
Keyphrases
  • human health
  • health risk
  • photodynamic therapy
  • solar cells
  • heat stress
  • climate change
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • oxide nanoparticles