The effect of the regular solution model in the condensation of protoplanetary dust
Francesco C. Pignatale (CAS - Swinburne Uni), Sarah T. Maddison (CAS -, Swinburne Uni), Vianney Taquet (Universite Joseph Fourier/CNRS), Geoffrey, Brooks (FEIS - Swinburne Uni), Kurt Liffman (CSIRO)

TL;DR
This study uses a chemical equilibrium model with the regular solution approach to analyze dust condensation in protoplanetary discs, revealing temperature-dependent mineral formation sequences and highlighting differences from ideal solution models.
Contribution
It introduces the application of the regular solution model to protoplanetary dust condensation, improving the realism of predicted mineral sequences compared to ideal models.
Findings
Condensation occurs over a wide temperature range in discs.
High-temperature minerals include Ca-Al compounds and corundum.
Low-temperature minerals include iron compounds and sulfides.
Abstract
We utilize a chemical equilibrium code in order to study the condensation process which occurs in protoplanetary discs during the formation of the first solids. The model specifically focuses on the thermodynamic behaviour on the solid species assuming the regular solution model. For each solution, we establish the relationship between the activity of the species, the composition and the temperature using experimental data from the literature. We then apply the Gibbs free energy minimization method and study the resulting condensation sequence for a range of temperatures and pressures within a protoplanetary disc. Our results using the regular solution model show that grains condense over a large temperature range and therefore throughout a large portion of the disc. In the high temperature region (T > 1400 K) Ca-Al compounds dominate and the formation of corundum is sensitive to the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
