Interfacial Reaction Kinetics
Ben O'Shaughnessy (1), Dimitrios Vavylonis (2) ((1) Dept Chemical, Engineering, Columbia Univ (2) Dept Physics, Columbia Univ)

TL;DR
This paper investigates the kinetics of irreversible A-B reactions at interfaces between immiscible phases, revealing different regimes depending on spatial dimension and diffusion properties, with implications for molecular and polymer systems.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of interfacial reaction kinetics across various dimensions and dynamical exponents, including mean field, diffusion-controlled, and fluctuation-driven regimes.
Findings
At short times, reactions are second order in reactant densities.
Different kinetic regimes depend on spatial dimension relative to a critical value.
Long-time decay of reactant density varies with fluctuations and dimension.
Abstract
We study irreversible A-B reaction kinetics at a fixed interface separating two immiscible bulk phases, A and B. We consider general dynamical exponent , where is the rms diffusion distance after time . At short times the number of reactions per unit area, , is {\em 2nd order} in the far-field reactant densities . For spatial dimensions above a critical value , simple mean field (MF) kinetics pertain, where is the local reactivity. For low dimensions , this MF regime is followed by 2nd order diffusion controlled (DC) kinetics, , provided . Logarithmic corrections arise in marginal cases. At long times, a cross-over to {\em 1st order} DC kinetics occurs: $R_t \approx x_t…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTheoretical and Computational Physics · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Stochastic processes and statistical mechanics
