Mapping the influence of impurity interaction energy on nucleation in a lattice-gas model of solute precipitation†
Abstract
We study nucleation in the two dimensional Ising lattice-gas model of solute precipitation in the presence of randomly placed static and dynamic impurities. Impurity–solute and impurity–solvent interaction energies are varied whilst keeping other interaction energies fixed. In the case of static impurities, we observe a monotonic decrease in the nucleation rate when the difference between impurity–solute and impurity–solvent interaction energies is increased. The nucleation rate saturates to a minimum value with increasing interaction energy difference when the impurity density is low. However the nucleation rate does not saturate for high impurity densities. Similar behaviour is observed with dynamic impurities both at low and high densities. We explore a broad range of both symmetric and anti-symmetric interactions with impurities and map the regime for which the impurities act as a surfactant, decreasing the surface energy of the nucleating phase. We also characterise different nucleation regimes observed at different values of interaction energy. These include additional regimes where impurities play the role of inert-spectators, bulk-stabilizers or cluster together to create heterogeneous nucleation sites for solute clusters to form.