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Spinodal Vaporization – an Overlooked Prompt Decay Mode of Highly Excited Nuclei and its Familiar Telltale J. Tõke, University of Rochester • Open microcanonical framework of nuclear thermodynamics. • H2O and gentle thermodynamics of open meta-stable systems. • Physics and math behind the limits of thermodynamic (meta-)stability of compound nuclei – subtleties of Hessian matrices. • Volume boiling with formation of bubbles => prompt spinodal vaporization. • Surface boiling (without bubbles) => spinodal surface vaporization. • In iso-asymmetric matter => distillative spinodal vaporization. • Paramount importance of thermal expansion in nuclear thermodynamics at elevated excitations => retardation of statistical decay => phase-transition like scaling of Coulomb fragmentation yields => limit of the validity of the concept of the compound nucleus => boiling phenomenon and the appearance of limiting temperature. All experimentally verifiable!!! SPINODAL VAPORIZATION is BOILING Open Microcanonical Framework for Understanding Decay Modes of Highly Excited Nuclear Systems • Weisskopff – 1937 (no EOS, no thermal expansion, valid at lower E*) • Based on the concept of Boltzmann’s entropy • Approximates a metastable system by a system at equilibrium within the boundaries set by transition states -> system is assumed to decay whenever a transition state is reached via finite fluctuations • Macroscopic configurations populated according to their statistical weights given by their respective partition functions -> need only to calculate Boltzmann’s entropy for (transition) configurations of interest. • For high excitations -> thermal expansion + surface diffuseness (EOS) • Given a (Thomas-Fermi) recipe for evaluating configuration entropy, everything follows from the fundamental postulate of all microstates being equally probable – no ad hoc assumptions of freezeout volumes, no casual (non-causal) expansions, no tricks with EOS, vanishing Coulomb interactions, vanishing surface free energies, etc., etc… • Kind of art – it is not possible to calculate entropy for all possible configurations -> requires intuition in figuring out which configurations or degrees of freedom might matter (affect decay modes). Decay Modes etc. Generally, decay modes are associated with degrees of freedom and the associated fluctuations: • Nucleonic degrees of freedom -> particle evaporation • Shape degrees of freedom -> binary Coulomb fragmentation (fission) at lower excitations, multiple Coulomb fragmentation at higher excitations. Controlled by surface tension, vanishing with increasing excitation energy -> (second-order) phase-transition-like scaling of Coulomb fragmentation -> apparent “vanishing” of Coulomb interaction with increasing excitation energy (vide Fisher’s model) -> apparent large sizes of fragmenting systems (vide ad hoc “freezeout” volume) • Expansion degree of freedom (heavily un(der)appreciated) -> retardation of statistical decays -> (prompt) spinodal vaporization as a definite “boiling-point” excitation energy per nucleon is exceeded. “EOS – intensive”, with interesting experimental signatures. • Surface degrees of freedom (density profile) -> facilitate fragmentation -> spinodal surface vaporization. • Isospin degree of freedom -> distillative spinodal vaporization Case of H2O @1 atm: Tboil = 100oC; Vboil = 1.043L/kg; Tcrit = 374oC (!); Pcrit=218 atm (!!!); Vcrit=13.5L/kg (!!!); For open systems => gentle thermodynamics of meta-stability is possible at temperatures below boiling point only. Life on Earth owes it to the metastability of water below the boiling point. Beyond the boiling point, the meta-stability is lost and a gentle thermodynamics is not possible. Boiling is a very common phenomenon – not a sensational one. It must happen and does happen every time one tries. Hallmark signature of boiling => “thermostatic” limit on temperature and a spontaneous (spinodal) vaporization of parts of the liquid as more energy is supplied. The question is: what is it that makes water to lose meta-stability at some point and to begin boiling? The reason is the same as for realistic (open) nuclear systems – appearance of thermal instability, a particular case of spinodal instability associated with “wrong” curvature of the entropy function. Case of excited atomic nuclei Atomic nuclei are inherently open systems, meta-stable up to certain excitation energy and inherently subject to boiling, which has experimentally detectable signatures. So, why has the boiling phenomenon escaped theoretical attention when the experimental signatures were there, since 1988, to see? The reason is insistence of fashionable models on stability within a rigid confining box, sometimes called freezeout volume=> percolation, Ising, Pots, lattice-gas, SMM, MMMC, while the boiling phenomenon absolutely relies on an unconstrained thermal expansion of Wan-der-Waals type liquid and the expansion-induced cooling. There simply are so many wrong ways and so few (one?) right ways to “see” boiling! Right ensemble: Open Microcanonical at zero pressure – matter distribution adjusted to yield maximum configuration entropy => zero pressure. Conceptually: System is confined in the full (momentum + geometrical) phase space by the hypersurface of transition states (fragmentation saddle points and particle evaporation barriers) – same as in compound nucleus. Understanding Spinodal Instability For a system to be stable (necessary and sufficient) its characteristic state function must have proper curvature – be either concave (entropy) or convex (free energy, Landau potential) in the space of extensive system parameters (energy, volume, isospin, number of particles) –> Hessian (curvature matrix) of these characteristic functions must be either negative definite (entropy) or positive definite (free energy, Landau potential). If not, spinodal instability sets in with different phenomenologies for different ensembles. Hessian – matrix made of second derivatives of a function. Positive-definite all eigenvalues are positive. Negative-definite all eigenvalues are negative. All this means is that the characteristic state function must be concave/convex in all possible directions in the argument space of extensive parameters. Note the obvious ensemble non-equivalence: (i) Entropy for confined microcanonical system is a function of two extensive parameters, E and V => thermo-mechanical (spinodal) instability with L-G coexistence as an outcome. (ii) Entropy for open microcanonical system is a function of just energy => boiling (pure thermal) instability with no L-G coexistence in sight => vapors are never in equilibrium with the residual liquid. (iii) No spinodal instability in grand canonical and iso-neutral isobaricisothermal ensembles. Ensemble nonequivalence of thermodynamic instabilities continuation (iii) Helmholtz free energy A=A(V,T) – only V extensive => mechanical (spinodal) instability in canonical systems – ultimately L-G coexistence. (iv) Gibbs free energy G=G(T,P) – no extensive argument => no spinodal instability of any kind in isothermal-isobaric system! (v) Landau potential L=L(T,μ, V) – V is extensive but N is not fixed => no spinodal instability of any kind in grandcanonical systems!. When considering additionally N-Z asymmetry or isospin: (i) thermo-chemo-mechanical spinodal instability in confined microcanonical (L-G). (ii) thermo-chemical spinodal instability in open microcanonical (no L-G). (iii) chemo-mechanical instability in canonical. (iv) Pure chemical instability in isothermal-isobaric. (v) Still no instability of any kind in grandcanonical. Ensemble equivalence applies to individual configurations => nonequivalence is not sensational but trivial for systems that allow multiple configurations, also for large systems. Nonequivalence does not mean that all are equally bad. “Good” is only microcanonical!!! Framework of Harmonic-Interaction Fermi-Gas Model for Self-Contained System – Open Microcanonical J.T. et al. in PRC 67, 034609 (2003). 1. Consider system large enough to justify the neglect of surface effects -> bulk properties only. 2. Fundamental strategy -> express the (uniform) configuration entropy as a function of excitation energy E* and bulk density ρ and then for any given E* find the bulk density that maximizes entropy. Start with: )2 , a ao ( ) 2 / 3 o o * eq 1 Etot 1 9 8 o 4 Ebind * S 2 a( Etot Ecompr ), Obtain equilibrium density Ecompr Ebind (1 Now, study the 1-by-1 Hessian of entropy as a function of solely energy -> the second derivative of entropy with respect to energy is the sole eigenvalue and it must be negative – heat capacity must be positive. 2 d S (E) 0 2 dE Thermal instability (boiling point) where d 2S (E) 0 2 dE Boiling instability in open microcanonical system (Harmonic Interaction Fermi Gas) Density drops with increasing energy – equilibrium thermal expansion ends at the star => spontaneous expansion. * Thermal expansion reduces the rate of growth of T and eventually causes T to start dropping with E* Low latent heat. Entropy is first a concave function of E* and then turns convex. Unlike the “convex intruder” in boxed systems, here the “extruder” stays convex to the end guaranteeing no L-G coexistence. To better see the convexity, a linear function subtracted from the entropy function above. Isotherms in Harmonic-Interaction Fermi Gas Model For large systems: Open microcanonical possible only within the green segment. All rich nuclear thermodynamics is right here. Boiling: Increasing energy at zero pressure causes thermal expansion and, first, crossing of subsequent isotherms with increasing indices -> temperature first raises. After passing the boiling point temperature decreases. •Under the L.G. coexistence curve only two-phase system possible “in the long run”. In the confined ensembles, only the “long-run” stable systems matter. •IMPORTANTLY: Space between the spinodal and coexistence boundaries is metastable - may be visited transiently by homogeneous matter – will evaporate/condense to end up on a suitable “step” of the “Maxwell ladder”. The entropy surface for open hypothetical bi-phase HIFG S-Suniform Two equal-A parts considered with varying split of the total excitation energy between them Etot (E1-E2)/Etot Up to the boiling point, the system has maximum entropy for uniform configuration (E1=E2). It fluctuates around uniform distribution. •Beyond the boiling point, there is no maximum. In actuality, the system has no chance to ever reach uniformity for Etot>Eboiling •Demonstrates the fallacy of the very concept of negative heat capacity. There simply is no way of establishing what the temperature is when Etot>Eboiling. •Note that one never calculates the system S (impractical), only S for configurations of interest. But it is the system S that defines T, p, etc. Configuration entropy may approximate well the system entropy in some domains but does not do so in some other domains of interest. Phenomenology of volume boiling As excitation energy is raised, the matter expands and heats up by increasing temperature – the expansion reduces the rate of the T increase. When the energy is raised above the boiling-point energy, thermal instability sets in, such that when parts of the system manage to “accept” (via infinitesimally small statistical) fluctuations energy from the neighboring parts they expand thermally and cool down, rather than heating up. As the “acceptor” parts cool down, they now extract (Second Law of Thermodynamics) even more heat from the neighboring parts (which may have actually got hotter as a result of “donating” energy). The expansion of the “bubble” continues at the expense of the neighboring “donor” parts until the bubble has acquired enough energy to expand on its own resources indefinitely and thus vaporize into open space. The residue will be left at the boiling temperature. Interacting Fermi-Gas Model for finite systems with diffuse surface domain Express the entropy as a function of total excitation energy E* and parameters of the matter distribution – half-density radius Rhalf and (Süssmann) surface diffuseness d. • For any given E* find the density profile that maximizes entropy. • Now entropy is a function of solely E. Assume error-function type of matter density distribution and calculate little-a from a (Thomas-Fermi) integral (J.T. and W.J. Swiatecki in N.P. A372 (1981) 141). : r Rhalf Norm 1 erf ( o 2 2d ) a( Rhalf , d ) o 1 3 dv Calculate interaction energy Eint(Rint,d) by folding the binding energy as a function of matter density (medium EOS was used) with the density profile and a “smearing” gaussian emulating the finite range of nuclear interactions. Then, calculate entropy as: S ( Rhalf , d , E*) 2 a( Rhalf , d )( E * Eint ( Rhalf , d )) Droplet of interacting Fermi liquid with A=100 Half-density radius->thermal expansion, then “contraction” (?) Surface diffuseness->thermal expansion of the surface domain Expansion is not self-similar. Central density first decreases (decompression) and, then the trend reverses (?) Pressure in the bulk decreases as a result of reduction in surface tension. Then increases (?) The caloric curve features a maximum now at around 5 MeV/A, followed by the domain of negative heat capacity. •Thermodynamic instability of the surface profile – boiling of the surface. All curves meaningless above the boiling point.. Phenomenology of surface boiling As excitation energy is raised, the matter expands and heats up by increasing temperature – the expansion reduces the rate of the T increase. The surface domain is more weakly bound and expands at a somewhat higher rate – the expansion is not self-similar. When the boiling-point excitation energy is reached, parts of the surface domain begin expanding at the expense of their neighboring pars and cooling down while expanding. Then these sections of the surface expand even further eventually “diffusing” away into open space. What is left behind is a meta-stable residue at boiling-point temperature. In the modeling, the surface boiling occurs at significantly lower temperature than the volume boiling and consistent with experimentally observed limiting temperatures. • Boiling is an obvious decay mode of highly excited open systems – with definite and distinct experimental signatures - limiting temperature of the meta-stable residue, vapors at lower temperature than the residue, isotropic escape of the vapors, relatively low latent heat of boiling. • Higher the starting energy, more matter is vaporized leaving less for Gemini and for statistical Coulomb fragmentation a.k.a. multifragmentation (including binary fission) => rise and fall of mutifragmentation. Thermo-Chemical Instability in Iso-asymmetric Matter Again: self-contained microcanonical system -> volume is adjusted so as to maximize entropy -> S=S(E,I), where I=(N-Z)/A S must be concave in all directions -> H(S) must be negativedefinite: 2S E 2 H ( S ( E , I )) 2 S I E 2S E I 2S 2 I Diagonalize Hessian and inspect eigenvalues. Both must be negative for the system to be stable. Instabilities in Iso-asymmetric Bulk Matter; IsospinDependent Harmonic-Interaction Fermi-Gas Model Loss of stability against uniform expansion Loss of stability against uniform boiling (onset of negative heat capacity) Growth line of the spinodal instability – eigenvector of the Hessian. The final frontier of meta-stability – the onset of thermo-chemical instability -> isospin fractionation and distillation. Mathematically, one eigenvalue of the Hessian turns zero to go positive. Contour plot is of matter equilibrium density. May be studied experimentally!! Distillative boiling of I=0.5 Iso-asymmetric Matter From the origin of the plot to point A: normal thermalized heating of I=0.5 matter. 12 I=0 B T (MeV) 10 8 A I=0.5 6 4 IHIFG: cv=-16MeV cI=23MeV 2 0 0 4 8 12 E*/A (MeV/A) 16 Along the segment AB: boiling off of iso-rich matter (neutrons) as I approaches I=0. From point B on, system stays there, while subsequent portions of azeotropic I=0 matter are being boiled off at the boiling-point temperature TB of around 11 MeV. IHIFG – Isospin-dependent Harmonic-Interaction Fermi-Gas Model CONCLUSIONS • Spinodal vaporization or boiling is (arguably) the most overlooked phenomenon in nuclear science. • Thermal expansion is both, the blessing and the curse for the concept of the compound nucleus => first it extends the life of the C.N., then brings it to an end, and then again, helps a metastable residue to persist and undergo statistical multifragmentation, etc. Makes the life of a compound nucleus rich and worth living => discreet charm of thermodynamics. • Supported by common sense, but also by solid experimental evidence that has no alternative “plausible” explanation. •Characteristics of spinodal vaporization are functions of EOS, asy-EOS, and the range of nucleon-nucleon interaction and theory tells what these functions are. •Tempting: to study EOS via identifying the boiling residues. • Certainly worth trying: to identify boiling vapors and determine their temperature – interesting signatures. •Measure the mass and isospin vs. temperature of the boiling residues. Congratulations Joe with reaching another milestone in a remarkable career !!!