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Colligative Properties of Solutions: II. Vanishing Concentrations

Authors :
Lincoln Chayes
Kenneth S. Alexander
Marek Biskup
Source :
Journal of Statistical Physics. 119:509-537
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2005.

Abstract

We continue our study of colligative properties of solutions initiated in math-ph/0407034. We focus on the situations where, in a system of linear size $L$, the concentration and the chemical potential scale like $c=\xi/L$ and $h=b/L$, respectively. We find that there exists a critical value $\xit$ such that no phase separation occurs for $\xi\le\xit$ while, for $\xi>\xit$, the two phases of the solvent coexist for an interval of values of $b$. Moreover, phase separation begins abruptly in the sense that a macroscopic fraction of the system suddenly freezes (or melts) forming a crystal (or droplet) of the complementary phase when $b$ reaches a critical value. For certain values of system parameters, under ``frozen'' boundary conditions, phase separation also ends abruptly in the sense that the equilibrium droplet grows continuously with increasing $b$ and then suddenly jumps in size to subsume the entire system. Our findings indicate that the onset of freezing-point depression is in fact a surface phenomenon.<br />Comment: 27 pages, 1 fig; see also math-ph/0407034 (both to appear in JSP)

Details

ISSN :
15729613 and 00224715
Volume :
119
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Statistical Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dbe12c1e7048189adcc951f798b149b0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10955-005-3017-1