Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei

Essentials of a generalized compound nucleus model are introduced based on a concept of an open microca-nonical ensemble which considers explicitly the role of the diffuse surface domain and of the thermal expansion of nuclear systems in the quest for maximum entropy. This obvious generalization off...

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Main Author: J. Tõke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Nuclear Research, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 2013-06-01
Series:Âderna Fìzika ta Energetika
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jnpae.kinr.kiev.ua/14.2/Articles_PDF/jnpae-2013-14-0121-Toke.pdf
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spelling doaj-69637ff2c19a47f7b09a5141583a80112020-11-25T00:07:23ZengInstitute for Nuclear Research, National Academy of Sciences of UkraineÂderna Fìzika ta Energetika1818-331X2074-05652013-06-01142121128Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nucleiJ. Tõke0Department of Chemistry, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USAEssentials of a generalized compound nucleus model are introduced based on a concept of an open microca-nonical ensemble which considers explicitly the role of the diffuse surface domain and of the thermal expansion of nuclear systems in the quest for maximum entropy. This obvious generalization offers a unique and universal thermodynamic framework for understanding the changes in the gross behavior of excited nuclear systems with increasing excitation energy and, specifically, the competition between different statistical decay modes, includ-ing classical evaporation and binary fission, but also the Coulomb fragmentation of excited systems into multiple fragments – the famed multifragmentation. Importantly, the formalism offers a natural explanation, in terms of boiling or spinodal vaporization, for the experimentally observed appearance of limiting excitation energy that can be thermalized by an exited nuclear system and the associated limiting temperature. It is shown that it is the thermal expansion that leads to volume boiling in an infinite matter and surface boiling in finite nuclei. The latter constitutes an important and universal, but hitherto unappreciated decay mode of highly excited nuclei, a mode here named surface spinodal vaporization. It is also shown that in iso-asymmetric systems, thermal expansion leads to what constitutes distillation – a decay mode here named distillative spinodal vaporization.http://jnpae.kinr.kiev.ua/14.2/Articles_PDF/jnpae-2013-14-0121-Toke.pdfcompound nuclear modelexcited nuclear systemsspinodal vaporizationexcitation energy finite nucleidistil-lative spinodal vaporization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Tõke
spellingShingle J. Tõke
Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
Âderna Fìzika ta Energetika
compound nuclear model
excited nuclear systems
spinodal vaporization
excitation energy finite nuclei
distil-lative spinodal vaporization
author_facet J. Tõke
author_sort J. Tõke
title Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
title_short Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
title_full Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
title_fullStr Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
title_full_unstemmed Surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
title_sort surface boiling – an obvious but like no other decay mode of highly excited atomic nuclei
publisher Institute for Nuclear Research, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
series Âderna Fìzika ta Energetika
issn 1818-331X
2074-0565
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Essentials of a generalized compound nucleus model are introduced based on a concept of an open microca-nonical ensemble which considers explicitly the role of the diffuse surface domain and of the thermal expansion of nuclear systems in the quest for maximum entropy. This obvious generalization offers a unique and universal thermodynamic framework for understanding the changes in the gross behavior of excited nuclear systems with increasing excitation energy and, specifically, the competition between different statistical decay modes, includ-ing classical evaporation and binary fission, but also the Coulomb fragmentation of excited systems into multiple fragments – the famed multifragmentation. Importantly, the formalism offers a natural explanation, in terms of boiling or spinodal vaporization, for the experimentally observed appearance of limiting excitation energy that can be thermalized by an exited nuclear system and the associated limiting temperature. It is shown that it is the thermal expansion that leads to volume boiling in an infinite matter and surface boiling in finite nuclei. The latter constitutes an important and universal, but hitherto unappreciated decay mode of highly excited nuclei, a mode here named surface spinodal vaporization. It is also shown that in iso-asymmetric systems, thermal expansion leads to what constitutes distillation – a decay mode here named distillative spinodal vaporization.
topic compound nuclear model
excited nuclear systems
spinodal vaporization
excitation energy finite nuclei
distil-lative spinodal vaporization
url http://jnpae.kinr.kiev.ua/14.2/Articles_PDF/jnpae-2013-14-0121-Toke.pdf
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