Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 February 2010
The kinetics of first-order phase transitions involves the separation of an initially one-phase system into two coexisting phases. The formation and coarsening of domains of the coexisting phases as the system evolves are of central interest. The phase segregation process is usually studied by first preparing the system in a region of the phase diagram where the homogeneous state is stable. The system is then suddenly quenched into the two-phase region, and segregation into domains of the two stable phases takes place. Such phase segregation arises in a variety of physical contexts, including binary alloys and fluid mixtures, ferromagnetic systems, superfluids, polymer mixtures, and chemically reacting fluids. The temperature– composition (T, c) phase diagram for a binary mixture composed of constituents A and B is shown in Fig. 2.1. For low enough temperatures, in the region bounded by the coexistence curve the binary mixture will segregate into A-rich and B-rich phases.
A quench that takes the system from a homogeneous to a two-phase region is often performed by changing temperature suddenly at fixed concentration. Such a quench from the one-phase state at high temperatures may be carried out either along the critical isoconcentration line that passes through the critical point (path a), or along off-critical paths (path b). Phase segregation may be monitored by the changes in the local concentration of the binary mixture. In general, the variable that signals the passage from the one-phase to two-phase regions is called the order parameter ø.
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