The melting of spherical nanoparticles is considered from the perspective of heat flow in a pure material and as a moving boundary (Stefan) problem. The dependence of the melting temperature on both the size of the particle and the interfacial tension is described by the Gibbs-Thomson effect, and the resulting two-phase model is solved numerically using a front-fixing method. Results show that interfacial tension increases the speed of the melting process, and furthermore, the temperature distribution within the solid core of the particle exhibits behaviour that is qualitatively different to that predicted by the classical models without interfacial tension
Thermodynamic model first published in 1909, is being used extensively to understand the size-depend...
The classical formulation for the Stefan problem at the nanoscale does not work because the melting ...
The melting of triangular and rectangular solids is analyzed by means of new particle-type models. ...
The melting of a spherical or cylindrical nanoparticle is modelled as a Stefan problem by including ...
This thesis presents a mathematical modelling in nanotechnology. Many ex- periments and molecular dy...
Many physical properties of materials, especially the melting point, change when the physical size o...
The melting temperature of a nanoscaled particle is known to decrease as the curvature of the solid-...
The process of melting a small spherical particle is treated by setting up a two-phase Stefan proble...
In this paper we analyse the melting of a spherically symmetric nanoparticle, using a continuum mode...
The role of thermal relaxation in nanoparticle melting is studied using a mathematical model based o...
The addition of surface tension to the classical Stefan problem for melting a sphere causes the solu...
Under certain conditions, the mathematical models governing the melting of nano-sized particles pred...
In this paper we formulate a Stefan problem appropriate when the thermophysical properties are disti...
Standard mathematical models for phase change at the nanoscale involve an implicit assumption that t...
The problem of melting a crystal dendrite is modeled as a quasi-steady Stefan problem. By employing ...
Thermodynamic model first published in 1909, is being used extensively to understand the size-depend...
The classical formulation for the Stefan problem at the nanoscale does not work because the melting ...
The melting of triangular and rectangular solids is analyzed by means of new particle-type models. ...
The melting of a spherical or cylindrical nanoparticle is modelled as a Stefan problem by including ...
This thesis presents a mathematical modelling in nanotechnology. Many ex- periments and molecular dy...
Many physical properties of materials, especially the melting point, change when the physical size o...
The melting temperature of a nanoscaled particle is known to decrease as the curvature of the solid-...
The process of melting a small spherical particle is treated by setting up a two-phase Stefan proble...
In this paper we analyse the melting of a spherically symmetric nanoparticle, using a continuum mode...
The role of thermal relaxation in nanoparticle melting is studied using a mathematical model based o...
The addition of surface tension to the classical Stefan problem for melting a sphere causes the solu...
Under certain conditions, the mathematical models governing the melting of nano-sized particles pred...
In this paper we formulate a Stefan problem appropriate when the thermophysical properties are disti...
Standard mathematical models for phase change at the nanoscale involve an implicit assumption that t...
The problem of melting a crystal dendrite is modeled as a quasi-steady Stefan problem. By employing ...
Thermodynamic model first published in 1909, is being used extensively to understand the size-depend...
The classical formulation for the Stefan problem at the nanoscale does not work because the melting ...
The melting of triangular and rectangular solids is analyzed by means of new particle-type models. ...