Alternate Definitions for Nucleation

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Term: Nucleation
Definition: Action of special particles, termed "nuclei", in the passage from the vapour phase of a substance to the liquid or solid phase, or from the liquid to the solid phase.  WMOMeteoterm 

The process of initiation of a new phase in a supercooled (for liquid) or supersaturated (for solution or vapor) environment; the initiation of a phase change of a substance to a lower thermodynamic energy state (vapor to liquid condensation, vapor to solid deposition, liquid to solid freezing). In nature, heterogeneous nucleation is the more common where such a change takes place on small particles of different composition and structure. Homogeneous nucleation occurs when the change of state centers upon embryos that exist in the same initial state as the changing substance. In this case, the nucleation system contains only one component, and it is termed homogeneous nucleation. In meteorology, particularly in cloud physics, a number of types of nucleation are of interest. The process by which cloud condensation nuclei initiate the phase change from vapor to liquid is important in all cloud formation problems. The physical nature of freezing nuclei that may be responsible for the conversion of drops of supercooled water into ice crystals is critically important in precipitation theory, as is the clarification of the role of homogeneous nucleation near -40C. Thermodynamically, all nucleation processes involve free energy decrease associated with the bulk phase change and the free energy increase associated with the creation of new interfaces between phases.  AMSglossary 

 GCW 
Created 2017.06.06
Last Modified 2022.03.08
Contributed by GCW Glossary
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Term: Nucleation
Definition: The process of initiation of a new phase in a supercooled (for liquid) or supersaturated (for solution or vapor) environment; the initiation of a phase change of a substance to a lower thermodynamic energy state (vapor to liquid condensation, vapor to solid deposition, liquid to solid freezing). In nature, heterogeneous nucleation is the more common where such a change takes place on small particles of different composition and structure. Homogeneous nucleation occurs when the change of state centers upon embryos that exist in the same initial state as the changing substance. In this case, the nucleation system contains only one component, and it is termed homogeneous nucleation. In meteorology, particularly in cloud physics, a number of types of nucleation are of interest. The process by which cloud condensation nuclei initiate the phase change from vapor to liquid is important in all cloud formation problems. The physical nature of freezing nuclei that may be responsible for the conversion of drops of supercooled water into ice crystals is critically important in precipitation theory, as is the clarification of the role of homogeneous nucleation near -40C. Thermodynamically, all nucleation processes involve free energy decrease associated with the bulk phase change and the free energy increase associated with the creation of new interfaces between phases.
Created 2022.03.08
Last Modified 2023.03.27
Contributed by GCW Glossary
Permalink:
https://n2t.net/ark:/99152/h6661
Term: Nucleation
Definition: Action of special particles, termed "nuclei", in the passage from the vapour phase of a substance to the liquid or solid phase, or from the liquid to the solid phase.
Created 2022.03.08
Last Modified 2023.03.27
Contributed by GCW Glossary
Permalink:
https://n2t.net/ark:/99152/h6660