Surface diffusion
Some phenomena due to surface diffusion:
- Flattening a surface.
- Spherodizing.
- Rayleigh instability.
- Grain boundary grooving.
- Sintering
Self-assembled quantum dots
Some phenomena due to surface diffusion:
Diffusion and creep involve the same atomic process: atoms must change neighbors, aided by thermal energy. We explore their relation in this lecture.
I have taught this course four times before, but have never devoted lectures on basic thermodynamics. It is a subject I’m not good at, but I have used it often in research, in a loose way. One can ride a bicycle without knowing Newton’s laws, even though bicycle-riding is governed by Newton’s law. If thermodynamics gives me so much trouble, perhaps it also gives my students a lot of trouble. I have taken lectures from many teachers on the subject. None have really made me feel comfortable with it. Now I’m trying to teach you. I hope that I can help you become comfortable with the subject. Maybe you already are. Maybe you never will. I have no evidence that I can be more effective than these other teachers, but I have the enthusiasm of an amateur.
Cavity Growth Is Caused by a Series of Tiny Effects
A solid contains a spherical cavity, subject to a hydrostatic stress. For now, we assume that the solid is stiff so we ignore its deformation. The cavity can still change its size by a special mechanism: atoms diffuse through the solid between the cavity surface and the external surface. We will concentrate in this lecture on the question, Will the cavity shrink or enlarge? We will consider the diffusion process in some detail in the next lecture, and answer the question, How fast will the cavity change its size?
An essential step to “understand” thermodynamics is to get to know temperature: how temperature comes down as an abstraction from empirical observations, and how it rises up as a consequence of the fundamental postulate. I have just updated my notes on temperature. The beginning paragraphs of the notes abstract temperature from empirical observations. These paragraphs are posted here.
Looking back at episodes of our lives, we reflect on how people meet and how such meetings change lives. Information technology, broadly interpreted as means of communication among people, is always part of these narratives. But central to such narratives are nearly always people themselves and the content of their communication, rather than the means of their communication.
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