Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9829773 Journal of Crystal Growth 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
The condensation processes of interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) around a high temperature silicate melt droplet were investigated in situ by a newly developed flash heating technique under microgravity using a drop tube facility. Two-step nucleation process was captured in the vicinity of the MgSiO3 melt by a CCD camera. The first nucleation was observed at a distance of 7 mm from the vapor source at 0.3 s and the second nucleation was observed 1.4 s after the MgSiO3 melt evaporated. The first nucleated particles were irregularly shaped amorphous silica with a diameter of 100-500 nm. The amorphous enstatite particles with a diameter of 70 nm nucleated 1.1 s later. The observed condensation sequence was silica and then enstatite. The difference of these condensations sequence with the chemical equilibrium was showed through the present experiment. The present in situ observation under microgravity was found to be a very useful technique to judge the nucleation sequence of various phases in very short duration within 3.0 s.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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