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Classical nucleation of vapor between hydrophobic plates.

Antonio TintiAlberto GiacomelloSimone MeloniCarlo Massimo Casciola
Published in: The Journal of chemical physics (2023)
In this work, an extended classical nucleation theory (CNT), including line tension, is used to disentangle classical and non-classical effects in the nucleation of vapor from a liquid confined between two hydrophobic plates at a nanometer distance. The proposed approach allowed us to gauge, from the available simulation work, the importance of elusive nanoscale effects, such as line tension and non-classical modifications of the nucleation mechanism. Surprisingly, the purely macroscopic theory is found to be in quantitative accord with the microscopic data, even for plate distances as small as 2 nm, whereas in extreme confinement (<1.5 nm), the CNT approximations proved to be unsatisfactory. These results suggest how classical nucleation theory still offers a computationally inexpensive and predictive tool useful in all domains where nanoconfined evaporation occurs-including nanotechnology, surface science, and biology.
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