Observation of undercooling in a levitated nanoscale liquid Au droplet
Joyce Coppock, Quinn Waxter, Robert Wolle, and B. E. Kane

TL;DR
This study demonstrates the observation of undercooling phenomena in levitated nanoscale gold droplets, combining experimental techniques to measure phase transitions and compare results with theoretical models.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed experimental investigation of undercooling in levitated nanoscale gold particles, integrating optical and mass measurements.
Findings
Undercooling observed below the melting temperature.
Heating behavior depends on particle size.
Comparison with theoretical predictions shows good agreement.
Abstract
We investigate melting and undercooling in nanoscale (radius ~100 nm) gold particles that are levitated in a quadrupole ion (Paul) trap in a high vacuum environment. The particle is heated via laser illumination and probed using two main methods. Firstly, measurements of its mass are used to determine the evaporation rate during illumination and infer the temperature of the particle. Secondly, direct optical measurements show that the light scattered from the particle is significantly different in its liquid and solid phases. The particle is repeatedly heated across its melting transition, and the dependence of heating behavior on particle size is investigated. Undercooling -- the persistence of a liquid state below the melting temperature -- is induced via multi-stage laser pulses. The extent of undercooling is explored and compared to theoretical predictions.
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Taxonomy
Topicsnanoparticles nucleation surface interactions · Particle Dynamics in Fluid Flows · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
