2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(196a) The Influence of Critical Cavities on Homogeneous Bubble Nucleation: a New Picture of Bubble Formation?
To investigate in more detail the above conjecture, we adapt density functional theory (DFT) to calculate the (n, v) free energy surface of reversible bubble formation for the pure component superheated Lennard-Jones liquid. The new DFT calculations, which constrain the number of particles located inside the bubble for a fixed radius, confirm that after the free energy barrier has been surmounted the free energy surface abruptly ends along a locus of instabilities. In contrast to the classical picture of bubble nucleation, in which the surface continues indefinitely and describes the rapid, though reversible, growth beyond the barrier, the DFT results suggest that liquid-to-vapor liquid nucleation is more appropriately described by an activated instability. We also present molecular simulation results that validate the DFT predictions. Furthermore, the free energy surface reveals that the saddle point, which still corresponds to the critical bubble, is not the only pathway a bubble embryo may take in order to cross the activation barrier. The ridge corresponding to the maximum free energy for each n that leads to the critical bubble is not steep, suggesting that an embryo will more likely than not surmount the barrier along pathways that do not pass through the saddle point. We discuss the implications of this flat ridge for the mechanism of bubble nucleation near the thermodynamic spinodal.