Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Heterogeneous reactions Ostwald ripening

These brief remarks on Ostwald ripening conclude the discussion of nucleation and early growth stages of heterogeneous reactions at this point. Some of the concepts are deepened in Chapter 12 on phase transformations [see also R. Wagner, R. Kampmann (1991)]. [Pg.146]

In Chapter 3 we described the structure of interfaces and in the previous section we described their thermodynamic properties. In the following, we will discuss the kinetics of interfaces. However, kinetic effects due to interface energies (eg., Ostwald ripening) are treated in Chapter 12 on phase transformations, whereas Chapter 14 is devoted to the influence of elasticity on the kinetics. As such, we will concentrate here on the basic kinetics of interface reactions. Stationary, immobile phase boundaries in solids (e.g., A/B, A/AX, AX/AY, etc.) may be compared to two-phase heterogeneous systems of which one phase is a liquid. Their kinetics have been extensively studied in electrochemistry and we shall make use of the concepts developed in that subject. For electrodes in dynamic equilibrium, we know that charged atomic particles are continuously crossing the boundary in both directions. This transfer is thermally activated. At the stationary equilibrium boundary, the opposite fluxes of both electrons and ions are necessarily equal. Figure 10-7 shows this situation schematically for two different crystals bounded by the (b) interface. This was already presented in Section 4.5 and we continue that preliminary discussion now in more detail. [Pg.244]


See other pages where Heterogeneous reactions Ostwald ripening is mentioned: [Pg.326]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.367]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.342]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.556]    [Pg.288]   


SEARCH



Heterogeneous reaction

Ostwald

Ostwald ripening

Reaction heterogeneous reactions

© 2024 chempedia.info