Mechanochemical Continuum Modeling of Nanovoid Nucleation and Growth in Reacting Nanoparticles

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2012-01-12
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Levitas, Valery
Attariani, Hamed
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Aerospace Engineering

The Department of Aerospace Engineering seeks to instruct the design, analysis, testing, and operation of vehicles which operate in air, water, or space, including studies of aerodynamics, structure mechanics, propulsion, and the like.

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The Department of Aerospace Engineering was organized as the Department of Aeronautical Engineering in 1942. Its name was changed to the Department of Aerospace Engineering in 1961. In 1990, the department absorbed the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics and became the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics. In 2003 the name was changed back to the Department of Aerospace Engineering.

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1942-present

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  • Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics (1990-2003)

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Abstract

Hollow nanoparticles (NPs) are produced by void nucleation and growth during chemical reactions. However, there is no proper understanding of nucleation and growth mechanisms and their predictive modeling. Models based on the Kirkendall effect predict the process time, which is larger by orders of magnitude than in experiment. This is why some works propose that a large tensile pressure in the core causes void nucleation. Here, a continuum-mechanics approach for nucleation and growth of a nanovoid in reacting NPs based on the Kirkendall effect is developed. In contrast to previous approaches, void nucleation and the effects of stresses are treated explicitly. The void nucleation condition vs pressure, temperature, size of a vacancy, core material, and initial reaction product layer is determined, and a strong multifaceted effect of mechanics is revealed. Thus, with mechanics, a cluster consisting of four vacancies represents the supercritical nucleus. Surprisingly, the core is under compression (which eliminates fracture hypothesis), and compressive pressure and reduced temperature promote void nucleation by decreasing the equilibrium concentration of vacancies at the void surface. However, they suppress void growth by reducing the diffusion coefficients. Our model quantitatively describes the experimental results for oxidation of copper NPs. A thermomechanical loading program is suggested to accelerate and control void nucleation and growth.

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Posted with permission from Journal of Physical Chemistry C 118 (2012): 54–62, doi:10.1021/jp2055365. Copyright 2012 American Chemical Society.

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Sun Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2012
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