Preface: Special Topic on Nucleation: New Concepts and Discoveries

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Abstract

Many phenomena in the world around us depend on infrequent, yet short-lived, events that completely alter how a system subsequently develops in time. In the physical sciences, there are many examples of such crucial “rare events.” Among the most important of these are nucleation processes, in which, due to a rare fluctuation, a new phase forms spontaneously within a meta-stable parent phase. Because nucleation processes are both rare and rapid and happen on a microscopic spatial scale, their experimental study is challenging. In recent years, there have been major developments both in the experimental study of nucleation phenomena and in the numerical simulation of such processes. As the articles in this special issue demonstrate, these recent advances in the ability to probe nucleation phenomena have transformed our understanding of the field.

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Kelton, K. F., & Frenkel, D. (2016, December 7). Preface: Special Topic on Nucleation: New Concepts and Discoveries. Journal of Chemical Physics. American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4967522

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