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Thermodynamics of metastable phase nucleation
at the nanoscale
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang*State Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Materials and Technologies, School of Physics Science
and Engineering, Zhongshan University, Guangzhou 510275, China
Received 12 April 2005; accepted 2 June 2005
Abstract
Chemical and physical routes under conditions of moderate not extreme temperatures and pressures are generally
used to synthesize nanocrystals and nanostructures with metastable phases. However, the corresponding bulk
materials with the same metastable structures are prepared under conditions of high temperatures or high pressures.
The size effect of nanocrystals and nanostructures may be responsible for the formation of these metastable phases at
the nanometer size. To date, there has not been a clear and detailed understanding of the effects causing the formation
of the metastable structures from the viewpoint of thermodynamics. There is no a clear insight into which chemical
and physical origins leading to the tendency of the metastable phases emerging at the nanoscale. We have proposed
universal thermodynamic approach on nanoscale to elucidate the formation of the metastable phases taking place in
the microphase growth. In this review, we first introduce the fundamental concepts and methods of the thermodynamic
approach on nanoscale (so-called nanothermodynamics). Note that our nanothermodynamics, by taking into account
the size-dependence of the surface tension of nanocrystals, differs from the thermodynamics of small systems
proposed by Hill [T.L. Hill, J. Chem. Phys. 36 (1962) 3182; T.L. Hill, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93 (1996) 14328;
T.L. Hill, R.V. Chamberlin, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95 (1998) 12779; T.L. Hill, J. Chem. Phys. 34 (1961) 1974;
T.L. Hill, J. Chem. Phys. 35 (1961) 303; T.L. Hill, Nano Lett. 1 (2001) 273; T.L. Hill, R.V. Chamberlin, Nano Lett. 2
(2002) 609; T.L. Hill, Nano Lett. 1 (2001) 159]. Our thermodynamic theory emphasizes the size effect of the surface
tension of nanocrystals on the stable and metastable equilibrium states during the microphase growth. Then, taking the
syntheses of diamond and cubic boron nitride (c-BN) nanocrystals as examples, we summarize the applications of the
nanothermodynamics to elucidate the nucleation of diamond and related materials nanocrystals in various moderate
environments. Firstly, we studied diamond nucleation upon chemical vapor deposition (CVD), and found out that the
capillary effect of the nanosized curvature of diamond critical nuclei could drive the metastable phase region of the
nucleation of CVD diamond into a new stable phase region in the carbon thermodynamic equilibrium diagram.
Consequently, the diamond nucleation is preferable to the graphite phase formation in the competing growth of
diamond and graphite upon CVD. Similarly, c-BN nucleation upon CVD has been investigated. Secondly, we
investigated the c-BN nucleation taking place in the high-pressure and high-temperature supercritical-fluids systems
under conditions of the low-threshold-pressures (<3.0 GPa) and low-temperatures (<1500 K), and predicted the
threshold pressure of the formation of c-BN in the high-pressure and high-temperature supercritical-fluids system.
Thirdly, to gain a clear insight into the diamond nucleation upon the hydrothermal synthesis and the reduction of
carbide (HSRC), we have performed the thermodynamic approach on nanoscale, in which the diamond nucleation is
preferable to the graphite phase formation in the competing growth between diamond and graphite upon HSRC. We
theoretically predicted that the pressure of 400 MPa should be the threshold pressure for the diamond synthesis by
HSRC in the metastable phase region of diamond in the carbon phase diagram. More importantly, these theoretical
results above are consistent with the experimental data. Additionally, the developed nanothermodynamics was used to
study the theory of nucleation and growth of diamond nanowires inside nanotubes. Accordingly, the thermodynamic
Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +86 20 8411 3692; fax: +86 20 8411 3692.
E-mail address: stsygw@zsu.edu.cn (G.W. Yang).
0927-796X/$ – see front matter # 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.mser.2005.06.002
approach on the nanometer size seems to provide insight into the metastable phase generation in microphase growth
from the viewpoint of thermodynamics. Therefore, we expect the nanothermodynamic analysis to be a general method
to understand the metastable phase formations on nanoscale.
# 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Metastable phase; Nucleation; Thermodynamics; Phase diagram; Gibbs free energy; Nanometer size
1. Introduction
Generally, the nucleation process by which clusters of a new phase from a parent phase is a
universal phenomenon in both nature and technology, for example, the basic processes of gas
condensation, liquid evaporation, and crystal growth. There is interest in developing quantitative
accurate theoretical tools such as thermodynamics and kinetics to address the nucleation since the
classical nucleation theory (CNT) was built by the collective pioneer work of Volmer and Weber [1],
Farkas [2], Becker and Doring [3], Volmer [4], as well as later developed models by Zeldovich [5],
Frenkel [6], Turnbull and Fisher [7], and Turnbull [8,9]. It is well known that CNT ever successfully
predicted the critical supersaturation in gas condensation. However, CNT has come in for scrutiny due
to the improvements in experimental techniques that may now measure the actual nucleation rates.
Oxtoby found that CNT is not accurate for the description of the temperature dependence of the
nucleation rate in some experimental cases [10]. The discrepancy has stimulated the development of
the new theoretical tools such as the density-functional theory and computer stimulation [10–12].
Thermodynamically, the fundamental understanding of the nucleation process is still lacking in some
systems. In detail, many denser structures with metastable phases can be realized from their parent
phases under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions, and these metastable structural states
have unique properties without any change in the material composition compared with the stable
states. If sufficiently large energetic barriers depress the metastable structural states to transform to the
more energetically favorable structure, the high-pressure phases can be kept in the metastable states
under conditions of the ambient pressure and temperature. The best-known examples are diamond and
cubic boron nitride (c-BN or cubic BN), which are metastable structures compared with their graphite
and hexagonal boron nitride (h-BN) partners. However, many chemical and physical routes under
moderate pressure and temperature are generally used to synthesize these high-pressure phases with
metastable structural states in the corresponding thermodynamic equilibrium diagram in recent years
[13–28]. To our best knowledge, the nucleation and phase transition mechanism involved in the
formation of the metastable phases is still lacking.
On the other hand, in some materials processes, the metastable phases first nucleate in the
strongly unstable phase region of the metastable structural states from their parent phases, and then,
after an appreciable time, they are transformed to the stable phase [29]. These cases are similar to the
well-known Ostwald stage rule [30]. Fortunately, the nucleation and the limited growth of the
metastable phase under the conditions of moderate pressure and temperature have been qualitatively
explained by the capillary effect of the small particles by Garvie [31] and Ishihara [32]. They pointed
out that the capillary pressure built up in the nuclei could be so large that the high-pressure phase tends
to becomemore stable than the low-pressure phase. Since then, the viewpoint has beenmost frequently
quoted. Nevertheless, the full understanding of the metastable phase nucleation in the strongly
unstable phase regions of the metastable state (MPNUR) in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase
diagram is still qualitative. For this issue, in a series of publications by our group, we have established
the universal quantitative thermodynamic approach at the nanometer scale based on the Laplace–
Young equation and the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram to quantitatively elucidate
158 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
MPNUR in the microphase growth, as the nucleation usually takes place at the nanometer size, i.e., the
microphase growth.
This review is devoted to the systematic introduction of the fundamental concepts including
physical and chemical aspects and applications of the quantitative thermodynamic approach at the
nanometer scale in the formation of the metastable phases. We first introduce the fundamental outline
of two kinds of nanothermodynamic approaches based on the fluctuations of the temperature and the
Tsallis’ entropy in small systems due to the beginning of the nucleation reactions at the nanometer
scale in Section 2. Then, our nanothermodynamic approach, the thermodynamics of MPNUR on
nanoscale, is introduced in Section 3. Our nanothermodynamics, by taking into account the size-
dependence of the Gibbs free energy of nanocrystals, definitely differs from the thermodynamics of
small systems proposed by Hill [33–40], as our thermodynamic theory emphasizes the nanosize effect
of the surface tension of nanocrystals on the stable and metastable equilibrium states during the
microphase growth. In this approach, free of any adjustable parameters, the quantitative thermo-
dynamic description of MPNUN is obtained by the appropriate extrapolation of the phase equilibrium
(P, T) line of the generally accepted thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram and the securable
macroscopically thermodynamic data. Afterward, taking the diamond and c-BN nucleation in the
unstable phase regions of the structure states as examples, we summarize the applications of the
proposed nanothermodynamics to elucidate the nucleation of diamond and cubic boron nitride in
various moderate environments in Sections 4 and 5 [41–48]. Finally, the conclusion remarks are given
in Section 6.
2. Nanothermodynamics
2.1. Fundamental concepts
With the advancement of techniques of creating and characterizing materials, a huge of ‘‘small’’
sizes grains (micrometers), nanosystems, molecular magnets, and atomic clusters, has been formed
and displays a variety of interesting physical and chemical properties. Lee and Mori reported the
reversible diffusion phase change in the nanometer-sized alloy particles [49]. Nanda et al. found that
the surface energy of the free Ag nanoparticles is significantly higher than the bulk values by the
unique method [50]. Shibata et al. observed the size-dependent spontaneous alloying of the Au–Ag
nanoparticles [51]. The size-dependence of the surface ferromagnetism of Pd nanoparticles was found
only on the (1 0 0) facets [52]. Mamin et al. detected the statistical polarization in a small ensemble of
the electron spin centers by magnetic resonance force spectroscopy [53]. Dick et al. found size-
dependent melting of the silica-encapsulated gold nanoparticles [54]. Masumara et al. measured an
unexpected decrease in the strength of various materials, when the sizes of micrometer change into the
nanometer scale [55]. Lopez et al. reported the size-dependent optical properties of VO2 nanoparticle
arrays [56]. Similarly, Katz et al. found the size-dependent tunneling and optical spectroscopy of CdSe
quantum rods [57]. Lau et al. found out the size-dependent magnetism of iron clusters [58]. Voisin
et al. reported the size-dependent electron–electron interactions in metal nanoparticles [59]. There-
fore, all these experimental cases clearly show that the size-dependence of properties is one of
distinguishing features of nanomaterials. Naturally, it is important and timely to develop the new
theoretical tools to address these experimental findings. On the other hand, the rapid progress in the
synthesis and processing of materials with the structures at the nanometer size has created a demand
for greater scientific understanding of the thermodynamics on nanoscale (thermodynamics of small
systems). The issue of application of the thermodynamics on nanoscale has been continuously
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 159
attracted, since the nucleation reaction was discovered in the early 1930s [60]. Especially, the famous
talk was given by Feynman with the title ‘‘There’s Plenty of Room at the Bottom’’ on December 29,
1959 at the annual meeting of the American Physical Society [61], in which nanotechnology was for
the first time formally recognized as a viable field of research. For instance, a good example is the
renowned publication of two books with the title ‘‘Thermodynamics of Small Systems’’ by Hill in early
1960s [62,63], and recently, the thermodynamics of small systems is renamed ‘‘nanothermody-
namics’’ [38].
Traditionally, thermodynamics of large systems composing many particles has been well
developed [64–66]. Classical thermodynamics describes the most likely macroscopic behavior of
large systems with the change of macroscopic parameters. The really large systems of astrophysical
objects as well as small systems containing a relatively small number of constituents (at the nanometer
scale) are excluded. Therefore, there is a great deal of interest and activity in the present day to extend
the macroscopic thermodynamics and statistical mechanics to the nanometer scale consisting of
countable particles below the thermodynamic limit due to the recent developments in nanoscience and
nanotechnology. To generalize the thermodynamics on scale, we need to well understand the unique
properties of nanosystems. It is well known that one of the characteristic features of nanosystems is
their high surface-to-volume ratio. As results of surface effects becoming increasingly important with
decreasing size, and then, the Gibbs free energy relatively increases for some thermodynamic
equilibrium systems. Therefore, the behavior of such nanoscopic clusters differs significantly from
the usual thermodynamic limit [67]. On the other hand, it is clearly known that when the system size
decreases, one has to consider the fluctuations. Based on the nucleation reactions, the first con-
siderations are on the temperature fluctuations [60]. The quantitative measurements of temperature
fluctuations were realized by superconducting magnetometers [68]. Interestingly, it is well explained
in the following statement by the US National Initiative on Nanotechnology [69] that the fluctuations
play an important role: ‘‘There are also many different types of time scales, ranging from 10�15 s to
several seconds, so consideration must be given to the fact that the particles are actually undergoing
fluctuations in time and to the fact that there are uneven size distributions. To provide reliable results,
researchers must also consider the relative accuracy appropriate for the space and time scales that are
required; however, the cost of accuracy can be high. The temporal scale goes linearly in the number of
particlesN, the spatial scale goes as O(N log N), yet the accuracy scale can go as high asN7 toN! with a
significant prefactor.’’ Therefore, these valuable hints motivate researchers to pursue the thermo-
dynamic description at the nanometer size for the nucleation of the metastable phase. Up to date, there
are two kinds of fundamental approaches to open out the thermodynamics on nanoscale based on the
microscopic and macroscopic viewpoints, respectively. One would go back to the fundamental
theorem of the macroscopic thermodynamics and establish the new formalism of the nanothermo-
dynamics by introducing the new function(s) presenting the fluctuations or the surface effect of
nanosystems [33–40,62,63,70–82]. Another one could directly modify the equations of the macro-
scopic thermodynamics and establish the new model of the thermodynamics on nanoscale by
incorporating the Laplace–Young or Gibbs–Thomson relation presenting the density fluctuation of
nanosystems in the corresponding thermodynamic expressions [41–48,83–87]. The fundamental
outlines of these approaches will be given in the following section.
2.2. Fundamental approaches
2.2.1. Nanothermodynamics—Hill’s theory
In the early 1960s, Hill [62,63] addressed the subject of the thermodynamics of small systems due
to his interest in thermodynamics of polymers and macromolecules. In order to clarify the relationship
160 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
between the macroscopic thermodynamics and the nanothermodynamics of Hill, first of all, let us go
back to the fundamental theorem and recapitulate the foundations of the thermodynamics of
macroscopic systems.
In the case of the equilibrium thermodynamics of a macroscopic system, the fundamental
equation for the internal energy, U, in the absence of an external field is expressed as
UðS;V ;NÞ ¼ TS� PV þ mN (2.1)
where S is the entropy (an extensive state function), and it is a function of the extensive variables (U,V,
N) in one-component system, T the absolute temperature, P the pressure, V the volume, m the
chemical potential, and N is the number of particles. The differential form of Eq. (2.1) may be
represented as
dU ¼ S dT þ T dS� V dP� P dV þ N dmþ m dN (2.2)
On the other hand, the relationships among U, S, V, N, T, P, and m can be expressed as
m ¼ @U
@N
� �S;V
; (2.3)
T ¼ @U
@S
� �N;V
; (2.4)
P ¼ � @U
@V
� �S;N
: (2.5)
Eq. (2.2) will change into the following form by employing one of the above three equations (2.3)–
(2.5)
S dT � V dPþ N dm ¼ 0 (2.6)
This is the celebrated Gibbs–Duhem relation, and implies that the changes in the intensive quantities
(m, T, P) are not independent. However, the usual choice (T, P) is made in the literature, defining an
equation of the state for the system. In particular, the Gibbs–Duhem relation implies that
@m
@P
� �T
¼ V
N; (2.7)
and
@m
@T
� �P
¼ � S
N: (2.8)
It is well known that three other functions, besides the internal energy, U, are very useful in
applications to the specific physical situations. The enthalpy is
HðS;P;NÞ ¼ UðS;V;NÞ þ PV (2.9)
The Helmholtz free energy
FðT;V ;NÞ ¼ UðS;V;NÞ � TS (2.10)
and the Gibbs free energy
GðT ;P;NÞ ¼ UðS;V;NÞ � TSþ PV (2.11)
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 161
According to the dependence relationships of these functions (U, H, F, G) and their continuity
properties in their appropriate variables, four thermodynamic equations called the Maxwell relations
can be yielded as
@T
@V
� �S
¼ � @P
@S
� �V
; (2.12)
@T
@P
� �S
¼ @V
@S
� �P
; (2.13)
@S
@V
� �T
¼ @P
@T
� �V
; (2.14)
and
@S
@P
� �T
¼ � @V
@T
� �P
: (2.15)
However, the state function, U, is not extensive in the variable, N, in a one-component nanosystem and
hence the chemical potential, m, will depend on the number of particles, N, in it. As a result, the other
thermodynamic equations will be invalid including the Maxwell relations in the nanosystems, because
the nanosystem is sensitive to the environment it is placed in, as will be described presently. Hill [62]
approaches the nanothermodynamics based on restating Eq. (2.1) and reflecting this feature of
nanometer size by introducing a new function, W(T, P, m), called ‘‘subdivision energy’’ defined as
W ¼ U � TSþ PV � mN (2.16)
Naturally, the differential form of the so-called ‘‘subdivision energy’’ can be expressed as
dW ¼ dU � S dT � T dSþ V dPþ P dV � N dm� m dN (2.17)
By substituting the first law of thermodynamics in the differential form
dQ ¼ T dS ¼ dU þ P dV � m dN (2.18)
For Eq. (2.17), one can obtain the result
dW ¼ �S dT � N dmþ V dP (2.19)
In the macroscopic systems, Eq. (2.16) would be identically zero, while Eq. (2.19) is the Gibbs–Duhem
relationship. These are the first step of Hill’s theory, and the rest of the development follows the
traditional path. From the above derivations, one can see that Hill’s theory is a generalized thermo-
dynamicmodel dealingwith nanosystems, as it startswith only the first lawof thermodynamics related to
three independent variables U, V, and N, and does not employ other thermodynamic relations. We well
know that the renowned first law of thermodynamics is context independent and another representative
form of the principle of conservation of energy based only on the physical considerations changing of
heat and work in any quasi-static process. On the other hand, another important point of Hill’s theory is
the sensitivity of nanosystems to its environment. For example, the nanosystem including the number of
particles, N, in a volume, V, immersed in a heat bath at the temperature, T, is different from the same
system contactingwith a reservoir at the same temperature. Thus, Hill introduces the subdivision energy,
W, by taking into account of the importance of the fluctuations in nanosystems, as above.
162 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
It is worth noting that Chamberlin et al. have extended Hill’s idea by considering the independent
thermal fluctuations inside bulk materials. In detail, they adapt Hill’s theory to obtain a mean-field
model for the energies and size distribution of clusters in condensed matter. Importantly, the model
provides a common physical basis for many empirical properties, including non-Debye relaxation,
non-Arrhenius activation, and non-classical critical scaling [88–97].
2.2.2. Nanothermodynamics—based on Tsallis’ generalization of ordinary Boltzmann–Gibbs
thermostatistics
The thermodynamic theory is on the basis of the Tsallis’ generalization of the ordinary
Boltzmann–Gibbs thermostatistics [98–102] by relaxing the additive properties of the thermodynamic
quantities (the entropy, in particular) to include non-extensivity of nanosystems [103]. As described by
Rajagopal et al. [104], the nanothermodynamics differs from Hill’s approach by considering that each
of the nanosystems fluctuates around the temperature of the reservoir, while nanosystems are coupled
to the reservoir. This means that the Boltzmann–Gibbs distribution has to be averaged over the
temperature fluctuations induced by the reservoir. It has been suggested recently that ‘q-exponential’
(x2-distributed) distributions
e�bquðxÞq ¼
Z 1
0
e�buðxÞ f ðbÞ db ¼ ½1þ ðq� 1Þb0uðxÞ��1=ðq�1Þ ðq> 1; b� 0Þ; (2.20)
which form the basis of Tsallis’ non-extensive thermostatistical formalism [98] may be viewed as the
mixtures of the Gibbs distributions characterized by a fluctuating inverse temperature. b�1q is a fitting
parameter analogous to the temperature [105–107] and u(x) is the one-particle energy function taken to
be a quadratic or a nearly quadratic function of the velocity variable. The ‘q-exponential’ distribution
is a universal distribution that occurs in many common circumstances such as if b is the sum of squares
of n Gaussian random variables, with
n ¼ 2
q� 1(2.21)
Furthermore, the essential point made by Beck (see [105] for the details) is that, if the probability
density, f(b), rules the temperature fluctuations, it has the following form [105]:
f ðbÞ ¼ 1
G 1q�1
� � 1
ðq� 1Þb0
� �1=ðq�1Þbð1=ðq�1ÞÞ�1 exp � b
ðq� 1Þb0
� �(2.22)
The constant b0 is the average of the fluctuating b, and it can be expressed by
q� 1 ¼ b�20
Z 1
0
ðb� b0Þ2 f ðbÞ db (2.23)
When the fluctuation is zero, we recover the usual Boltzmann–Gibbs distribution with q = 1 in the
above expressions. A point of interest is that the associated entropy is the non-additive Tsallis entropy
[108], given by
Sq ¼1�
Pi p
qi
q� 1(2.24)
when q = 1 goes over to the usual additive Gibbs entropy. We remark that a dynamic reasoning behind
the fluctuation may be thought of as arising from some kinds of the Brownian dispersion caused by the
interaction of the heat bath on the nanosystem [109,110]. There is a thermodynamics that goes with the
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 163
Tsallis entropy [108]. Accordingly, one has here an alternate way to describe the nanothermody-
namics.
The above two models reflect the different properties of the real nanosystems. However, these
approaches fail to quantitatively analyze the role of the interactions between the adjacent systems.On the
other hand, they take into account that the thermodynamic limit does not apply to the thermodynamics of
MPNUR. Naturally, these theoretical tools may be expected to extend to the thermodynamics of
MPNUR based on their fundamental theorem. Apparently, this mission is really complicated due to the
lack of the accurate potentials for most substances, and difficulties in the identification and even in the
definition of physically consistent clusters. Fortunately, in recent years, another fundamental approach
based on incorporating the Laplace–Young or Gibbs–Thomson relation presenting capillary effects of
nanosystems and the generally accepted thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram into the classical
nucleation theory has been used to describe the thermodynamics of MPNUR [41–48]. The detailed
derivation of this thermodynamic approach will be shown in next section.
3. Thermodynamics of metastable phase nucleation on nanoscale
3.1. Classical nucleation thermodynamics
Before starting the analysis of the thermodynamics of MPNUR, we need to look back on some
fundamental concepts of the nucleation theory involved in our model [41–48]. Actually, the nucleation
refers to the kinetic processes that initiate the first-order phase transitions in non-equilibrium systems,
and the nucleation of a new phase is largely determined by the nucleation work W. The quantity is
equal to spending the Gibbs free energy having or at least resembling the properties of the new phase
appearance in the parent phase of a density fluctuation and staying in the labile thermodynamic
equilibrium together with the parent phase. With a random acquisition even of a single molecule of a
new phase, the fluctuation may result in the spontaneous formation of the critical nucleation of the new
phase. For this reason, W is the energy barrier (critical energy of cluster formation, DG*) of the
nucleation. Therefore, the nucleation work plays an important role in the formation of a new phase.
However, it is well known that the initially homogeneous system is also heterogeneous in character-
ized by the non-uniform density and pressure. Therefore, the determination of DG* is a hard problem.
Namely, the case above makes it impossible to derive the nucleation work only from the method of the
thermodynamics of uniformly dense phases. In CNT, the critical nucleus is regarded as a liquid drop
with a sharp interface (a dividing surface) that separates the new and parent bulk phases. Matter within
the dividing surface is treated as a part of a bulk phase whose chemical potential is the same as that of
the parent phase. In the absence of knowledge of the properties of the microscopic clusters including
the surface tension, the bulk thermodynamic properties with several approximations are used to
evaluate the nucleation work in the discussions below.
In 1878 [111], Gibbs published his monumental work with the title ‘‘On the Equilibrium of
Heterogeneous Substances,’’ and his other publications have a special place in thermodynamics of the
phase’s mixture and equilibrium. Concretely, Gibbs extended the science of thermodynamics in a
general form to heterogeneous systems with and without chemical reactions. Especially, he introduced
the method of the dividing surface (DS) and used it to derive an exact formula forDG* in the nucleation
of a new phase in the bulk parent phase. In detail, with the aid of an arbitrarily chosen spherical DS, he
divided the heterogeneous system consisting of the density fluctuation and the parent phase into two
homogeneous subsystems, which are corresponding to the microscopical and macroscopical sub-
systems, respectively. The macroscopically large subsystem equals the parent phase with the uniform
164 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
density and pressure before the fluctuation formed. The microscopically small subsystem is an
imaginary particle (nucleus) replaced a reference new phase with the uniform density and pressure,
and surrounded by the large subsystem. The imaginary particle substitutes for the real nucleus of the
new phase, which is created by the density fluctuation. As Gibbs [111] described the difference
between the imaginary particle (globule by Gibbs definition) and the density fluctuation by the
following statement: ‘‘For example, in applying our formulas to a microscopic globule of water in
steam, by the density or pressure of the interior mass we should understand not the actual density or
pressure at the center of the globule, but the density of liquid water (in large quantities) which has the
temperature and potential of the steam.’’ Furthermore, very recently, Kashchiev detailedly expatiated
the difference between the imaginary particle and the real density fluctuation by the following
statement [112]: ‘‘(i) the nucleus size depends on the choice of the DS and may therefore be very
different from the characteristic size of the density fluctuation; (ii) the surface layer of the nucleus is
represented by the mathematical DS and is thus with zero thickness, whereas that of the density
fluctuation is diffuse and can extend over scores of molecular diameters; (iii) the pressure and
molecular density of the nucleus are uniform, and those of the fluctuation are not and might even be
hard to define when ‘at its center the matter cannot be regarded as having any phase of matter in mass
[113]’; (iv) the uniform pressure and density of the nucleus are equal to those of a reference bulk new
phase rather than to those at the center of the fluctuation.’’ Therefore, based on these approaches
above, Gibbs showed that the reversible work W (free energy of nucleation), required to form the
critical nucleus of a new phase, is
DG� ¼ AgT � VðPl � PvÞ; (3.1)
where A and V are the area and volume of the specific surface energy of a specially chosen DS, Pl the
pressure of the new bulk reference phase at the same chemical potential as the parent phase, and Pv is
the pressure of the parent phase far from the nucleus. gT is the ‘‘surface of tension,’’ called by Gibbs
[111], of the specific surface energy of a specially chosen DS, and it is called as the surface tension at
the present day.
In the Gibbs’ analysis, he found out that the classical Laplace–Young equation is valid in his DS,
and governs the pressure of droplets across a curved interface. For a spherical droplet with the critical
nucleus radius r*, the Laplace–Young equation reads
Pl � Pv ¼2gTr�
: (3.2)
Further, for the spherical critical nucleus, Gibbs showed that with Eq. (3.2), Eq. (3.1) becomes
DG� ¼ 16p
3
g3T
ðPl � PvÞ2(3.3)
However, the quantity gT could not be obtained by experiment, because it describes such a surface—an
imaginary physical object, i.e., the nucleus characterized by the surface of tension. Therefore, the
dependent relationships of gT and pressure, temperature, and composition of the parent phase,
respectively, are not uncovered. This limits the application of the nucleation theory to various cases
of interest. On the other hand, in order to describe the thermodynamic characterization of various
practical cases, we have to approximate gT by a real physical quantity. Clearly, in nearly all nucleationpapers that followed Gibbs’ equation, e.g., in Refs. [1–12], one used the real interface energy g0between the bulk parent and new phases at the phase equilibrium, i.e., at their coexistence, to replace
the surface tension gTof the imaginary DS. However, to apply this famous formula of Gibbs, one has to
know the exact interface energy that is related to the radius of droplets and the droplet reference
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 165
pressure. Unfortunately, there are tremendous challenges because there is no simple way to extract the
interface energy from the force measurements in theory. A given interface energy is a function of the
many coordinates of the nanoparticles. Lacking the knowledge of the exact interface energy, the first
approximation is to use the experimental interface energy of a flat interface, i.e., g0 = g. Actually, thesurface structure of droplets is different from that in the bulk, so that, strictly speaking, the boundary
surface never coincides with the equimolecular surface. Nevertheless, they are usually close to each
other and are often taken equally as the physical surface of the droplet. By assuming g0 = g, one canobtain the first form of the nucleation work
DG� ¼ 16p
3
g3
ðPl � PvÞ2: (3.4)
In principle, by adopting the approximation, the validity of the Gibbs’s expression on the basis of the
Laplace–Young equation should be limited to the sufficiently large nuclei. Interestingly, the
applications of the nucleation theorem [33,63,114–117] in the analysis of experimental data in
various cases of nucleation implied that the Laplace–Young equation could predict well the size of the
nuclei built up of less than a few tens of molecules [83–87,115–121]. Hwang et al. compared the
theoretical chemical potential of diamondwith that of graphite upon chemical vapor deposition (CVD)
by employing the Laplace–Young equation for the stability of the nuclei, and indicated that the
chemical potential of carbon between diamond and graphite was shown to be reversed when the size of
the carbon cluster is sufficiently small [83]. Experimentally, Gao and Bando used the Laplace–Young
equation to study the thermal expansion of Ga in carbon nanotubes [86,87]. Additionally, the Laplace–
Young equation at the nanometer scale has been extensively developed to study the formation of
quantum dots [84,86,87]. For instance, Tolbert and Alivisatos discussed the elevation of pressure in the
solid–solid structural transformation as the crystallite size decreases in the high-pressure system using
the Laplace–Young equation [84]. Accordingly, it seems to be recognized that the Laplace–Young
equation could be used to predict well the size of nuclei built up of less than a few tens of molecules.
On the other hand, based on the thermodynamic identity, we have
mlðPlÞ � mlðPvÞ ¼Z Pl
Pv
Vm dP; (3.5)
where Vm is the molar volume of a new phase and ml(Pl) and ml(Pv) are the chemical potential of
matter in the new phase at the pressures Pl and Pv. When the critical droplet and the metastable vapor
locate the condition of the unstable equilibrium, one can obtain
mvðPvÞ ¼ mlðPlÞ (3.6)
Furthermore, if we approximate Pl by assuming that the droplet is incompressible, and assume that Vm
is a constant. With Eq. (3.5), Eq. (3.6) becomes
Pl � Pv ¼mvðPvÞ � mlðPlÞ
Vm¼ Dm
Vm(3.7)
Eq. (3.7) turns into Eq. (3.4), one can obtain the second form of the nucleation work
DG� ¼ 16p
3
g3V2m
ðDmÞ2(3.8)
As Obeidat et al. stated [122], the form of the nucleation work is most useful if the chemical
potential difference between a new phase and its parent phase can be obtained. However, the actual
166 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
performance is quite complicated due to the lack of the accurate potentials for most substances. In
order to obtain the Dm, we have to adopt some necessary approximations. Generally, if we assume the
supersaturated and saturated vapors are the ideal gases and the droplet is an incompressible liquid, the
difference of the chemical potential Dm is more commonly derived from the approximate system. In
detail, under the above assumptions, we have
Pl ¼ Pev (3.9)
where Pev is the equilibrium-vapor pressure. With Eq. (3.9), Eq. (3.5) becomes
mlðPvÞ ¼ mvðPevÞ þ VmðPv � PevÞ (3.10)
When the new bulk phase and the parent phase are in the state of thermodynamic equilibrium, one can
obtain
mlðPevÞ ¼ mvðPevÞ (3.11)
With Eqs. (3.10) and (3.11), Eq. (3.7) becomes
Dm ¼ mvðPvÞ � mvðPevÞ � VmðPv � PevÞ (3.12)
Under the ideal vapor condition, we can easily obtain
mvðPvÞ � mvðPevÞ ¼ kT lnPv
Pev
� �(3.13)
where k is the Boltzmann constant, T the absolute temperature, and Pv is the actual pressure. With
Eq. (3.13), Eq. (3.12) becomes
Dm ¼ kT lnPv
Pev
� �� VmðPv � PevÞ (3.14)
In Eq. (3.14), compared with the first term on the right, the second term on the right is almost
extremely small, and it is customary to neglect it. Therefore, Eq. (3.8) will become the third form of the
nucleation work
DG� ¼ 16p
3
g3V2m
kT ln Pv
Pev
� � (3.15)
Applying the first two forms of the nucleation work requires the knowledge of the droplet reference
pressure or chemical potential. Usually, this information is unavailable, and the experimental results
are, instead, compared with the rates predicted using the third form, because the supersaturation ratio
is readily determined from the experimental data. Naturally, the size of the critical nucleation, the
critical energy, the phase transition probability, and the nucleation rate would be obtained by the
determined nucleation work.
In summary, from the point of CNT above, one can see that there is an important approximation,
i.e., assuring gT = g0 = g. Namely, the surface tension (gT) of a specially chosen DS, the real interfaceenergy (g0) between the bulk parent and new phases at the phase equilibrium, and the experimental
interface energy of a flat interface (g) are approximated to equal [1–12]. Furthermore, CNT indicates
that the Laplace–Young equation seems to be capable of predicting well the size of nuclei built up of
less than a few tens of molecules [83–87,115–121]. However, on the other hand, it is well known that
the CNT describes that a stable new phase forms from a metastable parent phase. Therefore, it is not
directly applied to MPNUR.
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 167
3.2. Application of Laplace–Young equation for the stability of nanophases
Asmentioned above, the beginning of the nucleation reactions involves the nanometer size, and it
is useful to briefly review the phase stability at the nanoscale based on the Laplace–Young equation
before starting the description of the thermodynamics of MPNUR due to the established model being
strongly related to the equation [41–48].
The following discussions of a series of representative nanosystems with the abnormally physical
properties described by the Laplace–Young equation in the recent years may give us insight into the
activity of the Laplace law in the nanosystems. In the past few decades, lots of researchers have
reported that the nanometer-sized particles usually show anomalies in the phase stability and the phase
transformation, and resulting in the metastable and unique crystal phases quite different from the
corresponding bulk materials [29,123–137]. With regard to the stability of nanocrystals, the best-
known example is that, compared with the corresponding bulk materials, the melting points of
nanocrystals decrease in a wide variety of materials ranging from metals to semiconductors and
insulators [29,135–137]. A sample of the typical data that can be obtained and the magnitude of the
effect for the experiments performed on CdS nanocrystals are presented in Fig. 1 [137]. Furthermore,
there are many excellent approaches for theoretical studies of the melting phenomenon in small
particles, such as the classical thermodynamic method based on the Laplace–Young equation [138],
which predicts a melting point temperature depression can be expressed as [139]
DT ¼ Tbulkm � TmðrÞ/a � 2g
r; (3.16)
where Tbulkm and Tm(r) are the bulk melting point temperature and the melting point temperature of the
corresponding nanocrystals related to size, respectively, and a is a parameter related to the bulk
melting point temperature, the bulk latent heat of fusion, and the solid phase density. The 2g/r is theLaplace–Young equation defined by Eq. (3.2). Importantly, Zhang et al. reported the melting behavior
168 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 1. Melting temperature as a function of the size of CdS nanocrystals. The solid line is a fit to a model that describes thedecrease in the melting temperature in terms of the difference in the surface energy between the solid and liquid phases (after[137]).
of 0.1–10-nm-thickness discontinuous indium films by an ultrasensitive thin-film scanning calori-
metry technique, and the experimental case is in excellent agreement with their quantitative theoretical
calculation in terms of the above theoretical model [140]. Namely, the melting behavior in
nanosystems can be characterized by the Laplace–Young equation resulting from the macroscopic
theory relating the surface tension to the additional pressure, although the melting behavior of
nanosystems is associated with the vibrational instability of crystal resulting from the difference of the
amplitude of vibration between the microscopic surface atoms and bulk atoms [141].
In the other cases, Tolbert and Alivisatos [85] developed a general rule for the effect of size on the
abnormally first-order solid–solid phase transitions, comparable to thewell-known1/rdependence of the
melting temperature on the basis of the Laplace–Young equation. Interestingly, their rule reasonably
explains the high-pressure structural phase transition of semiconductor nanocrystals from the point of
view of the kinetics. Furthermore, Jiang et al. calculated the static hysteretic loop widths of the solid–
solid phase transition of theCdS nanocrystals from the consideration of the thermodynamics on the basis
of the Laplace–Young equation, and their results are reasonable in comparison with theoretical and
experimental results [142]. Recently, Jiang et al. [143,144] proposed a thermodynamic approach in the
light of the Laplace–Young equation to analyze the abnormal phase stability between the nanometer-
scaled diamond and graphite, and obtained that the relative stability of diamond increases with the size
and temperature depression. Interestingly, their theoretical results are in agreement with other calcula-
tions in terms of the charge latticemodel [145] and experimental cases [146,147], respectively, as shown
in Fig. 2. From the aforementioned typical cases, one can see that the Laplace–Young equation resulting
from themacroscopic theory can predict someunusual properties of nanosystems, although these unique
properties result from the fluctuations and the surface effect of the microscopic systems.
In the following section, we will quantitatively describe the MPNUR in the light of the Laplace–
Young equation, CNT, and the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram. The brief description of
this topic given here suffices to provoke interest in this open topic. In the section, we hope to present a
purely ‘‘macro’’ view of the subject matter without directly invoking the microscopic underpinning of
MPNUR arising out of the fluctuations of the nanosystems.
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 169
Fig. 2. The size–temperature phase transition diagram of carbon at the zero pressurewhere the solid line and the segment lineshow the model prediction by adopting the different surface energy. The theoretical and experimental results are also plottedin the figure. The symbol ‘*’ denotes the theoretical estimation based on the surface energy difference between diamond andgraphite. The symbol ‘�’ gives the theoretical calculation in terms of the charge lattice model [145]. The symbol ‘^’ isbased on the experimental observation at 1073 K that nanodiamonds with d = 5 nm are transformed into nanographite [146].The symbol ‘~’ shows an experimental result where the nanodiamonds of 2 nm in size transform to the onion-like carbon at1300 K [147] (after [143]).
3.3. Thermodynamics of metastable phase nucleation in unstable region of thermodynamic
equilibrium phase diagram
MPNUR, such as CVD diamond, CVD c-BN, HSRC diamond, and c-BN nucleation, seems to be
impossible from the standpoint of thermodynamics, because the nucleation happens in the strongly
unstable region of the metastable structural state in terms of the thermodynamic equilibrium phase
diagram, and violates the second law of thermodynamics. For this issue, as Hwang and Yoon stated
regarding CVD diamond [148], ‘‘Something must be wrong either in interpreting the experimental
observation or in applying thermodynamics.’’ In fact, in the early 1965s [31], Garvie pointed out that
MPNUR likely arises out of the capillary pressure built up in the nuclei. Namely, the nanosize-induced
additional pressure could be so large that the high-pressure metastable phase tends to become more
stable than the low-pressure stable phase, as shown in Fig. 3. Note that, in the following description, a
phase is metastable or stable if it is stable or metastable without the effect of the nanosize-induced
additional pressure. In our theoretical approach, it also is emphasized that the nanosize-induced
additional pressure [41–48] is reasonably taken into account in the below analysis.
Generally, the Gibbs free energy is an adaptable measure of the energy of a state in phase
transformations among competing phases. At the given thermodynamic condition, both stable and
metastable phases can coexist, but only one of the two phases is stable, with the minimal free energy,
and the other must be metastable and may transform into the stable state. Thermodynamically, the
phase transformation is promoted by the difference of the free energies. The Gibbs free energy of a
phase can be expressed as a function of the pressure–temperature condition, and determined by a
general coordinate or reactive coordinate. According to CNT [149], the Gibbs free energy difference
arises from the formation of spherical clusters in the low-pressure gas phase is expressed as a function
of radius r, pressure P, and temperature T
DGðr;P; TÞ ¼ Vs
Vm� Dgþ ðAnegne þ Asngsn � AsegseÞ; (3.17)
where Vs and Vm are the volume of the spherical clusters with the metastable structural phase and its
molar volume,Dg the Gibbs free energy of molar volume depending on the pressure P and temperature
170 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 3. A sketch map of MPNURmechanism. A region is the metastable structural state of M phase, and B region is the newstable state of M phase by the nanosize-induced additional pressure driving. The inset shown in the sketch map displays thespherical nuclei nucleated on the hetero-substrate.
T in the phase transition, Ane and gne the interface area and the energy between the spherical clusters ofthe metastable structural phase and the environment gas phase, Asn and gsn the interface area and the
energy between the spherical clusters of the metastable phase and the hetero-substrate, and Ase and gseare the interface area and the energy between the hetero-substrate and the environment gas phase. The
formation of the spherical clusters with the metastable structural phase produces two interfaces, i.e.,
the interface Ane between the spherical clusters and the environment gas phase and the interface Asn
between the spherical clusters and the hetero-substrate, and makes the original interface Ase (be equal
to Asn) between the hetero-substrate and the environment gas phase vanish. According to the geometry,
the volume Vs of the spherical clusters of the metastable structural state, the interface area Ane between
the spherical clusters of the metastable state and the environment gas phase, and the interface area Asn
between the spherical clusters and the hetero-substrate are expressed as
Vs ¼pr3ð2þ mÞð1� mÞ2
3; (3.18)
Ane ¼ 2pr2ð1� mÞ; (3.19)
and
Asn ¼ pr2ð1� m2Þ; (3.20)
where r is the curvature radius of spherical clusters of the metastable structural phase and m is given by
m ¼ cos u ¼ gse � gsngne
; (3.21)
where u is the contact angle between the spherical clusters of the metastable structural state and the
hetero-substrate, as shown in the inset of Fig. 3. Here, gne is assumed to be approximately equal to the
surface tension value of the metastable structural phase (g), gse for the interface energy between the
hetero-substrate and the environment gas phase is taken to be equal to the surface tension value of the
hetero-substrate, and the interface between the spherical clusters and the hetero-substrate is assumed
to be incoherent interface; therefore
gsn ¼gne þ gse
2(3.22)
Thus, we can obtain
DGðr;P; TÞ ¼ 4
3pr3 � Dg
Vmþ 4pr2g
� �ð2þ mÞð1� mÞ2
4(3.23)
where the factor of
f ðuÞ ¼ ð2þ mÞð1� mÞ2
4(3.24)
is called as the heterogeneous factor, and its value is in the range of 0–1. Especially, when the clusters
nucleated on the homo-substrate, its value is 1.
According to thermodynamics, we have
@DgðT;PÞ@P
� �T
¼ DV (3.25)
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 171
Then, the difference of the Gibbs free energy per mole can be defined by
DgðT ;PÞ � DgðT ;P0Þ ¼Z P
P0
DV dP � DVðP� P0Þ ¼ DV � DP (3.26)
where DV is the mole volume difference between the metastable and the stable phase. When the
conditions are near the equilibrium line, one can approximately have Dg(T, P0) = 0. Thus, Eq. (3.26)
would be defined as
DgðT ;PÞ ¼ DV � DP: (3.27)
On the other hand, due to the nanosize-induced additional pressureDPn, the clusters enduring pressure
will increase by the same amount [41–48]. Under the assumptions of spherical and isotropic clusters,
the nanosize-induced additional pressure is denoted by the Laplace–Young equation, i.e.
DPn ¼ 2g
r(3.28)
Furthermore, as mentioned above, the nanosize-induced additional pressure can drive the metastable
phase regions into the stable phase region near the boundary line of the high-pressure phase in the
equilibrium phase diagram. Therefore, one can obtain the size-dependent equilibrium phase boundary
line between the metastable and the stable phases, and it can be approximately defined as
P ¼ Pb � 2g
r(3.29)
where Pb is the equilibrium phase boundary equation between the metastable and the stable phases.
From Fig. 3, one can see that the equilibrium phase boundary between the metastable and the stable
phases can be expressed by
Pb ¼ k0T þ b0 (3.30)
where k0 and b0 are the slope and intercept in the P coordinate axis of the equilibrium phase boundary
line between the metastable and the stable phases. With Eq. (3.30), Eq. (3.29) can be defined as
P ¼ k0T þ b0 �2g
r(3.31)
Therefore, DP would change into
DP ¼ P� k0T � b0 þ2g
r: (3.32)
With Eq. (3.32), Eq. (3.27) can be denoted by
DgðT ;PÞ ¼ DV � P� k0T � b0 þ2g
r
� �: (3.33)
With Eq. (3.32), Eq. (3.23) can be expressed as
DGðr;P; TÞ ¼ 4
3pr3 �
DV � P� k0T � b0 þ 2gr
� �Vm
þ 4pr2g
0@
1A f ðuÞ: (3.34)
172 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
When @DG(r)/@r = 0, the critical size of the high-pressure phase is obtained as
r� ¼2g 2
3 þVm
DV
� �k0T þ b0 � P
: (3.35)
Substituting Eq. (3.35) into Eq. (3.34), the critical energy of the high-pressure phase nuclei is given by
DGðr�;P; TÞ ¼ 4
3p
2g 23 þ
Vm
DV
� �k0T þ b0 � P
! 3
�DV
VmP� k0T � b0 þ
k0T þ b0 � P23 þ
Vm
DV
!þ 4p
�2g 2
3 þVm
DV
� �k0T þ b0 � P
!21A f ðuÞ (3.36)
On the other hand, it is well known that the phase transition is determined by the probability. We have
studied the nanosize effect on the probability of the phase transformation based on the thermodynamic
equilibrium phase diagram. The probability of the phase transformation from the metastable phase to
the stable phase is related not only to the Gibbs free energy difference Dg(T, P), but also to an
activation energy (Ea � Dg(T, P)), which is necessary for the phase transition, as shown in Fig. 4.
When the two phases are at the equilibrium condition, i.e., Dg(T, P) = 0, Ea is the maximum potential
energy for both sides with respect to the general coordinate. The general expression of the probability f
of the phase transformation from the initial states to final states is [150]
f ¼ exp �Ea � DgðT;PÞRT
� �� exp � Ea
RT
� �; (3.37)
where R is the gas constant andDg(T, P) is defined by Eq. (3.32). Accordingly, we have established the
thermodynamic approach at the nanometer size to quantitatively describe the nucleation and the phase
transition of the metastable phase in the strongly unstable phase region of the metastable structural
state in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram. In fact, the developed approach is a useful and
effective theoretical tool to address MPNUR, although it looks a little bit simple in thermodynamic.
Importantly, the validity of our thermodynamic theory has been substantively checked by use in the
nucleation of diamond and c-BN.
In the following section, using the proposed thermodynamic model above, we will consider
diamond and c-BN as examples to elucidate their nucleation and phase transition under various
unstable phase regions of these structural states in their phase diagrams.
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 173
Fig. 4. The schematic diagram of Gibbs free energy vs. coordinate (after [43]).
4. Thermodynamic descriptions of diamond nucleation in the unstable phaseregions of the structural state
The diamond lattice is composed of two interpenetrating face-centered cubic lattices, one
displaced 1/4 of a lattice constant in each direction from the other. Each site is tetrahedrally
coordinated with four other sites in the other sublattice, as shown in Fig. 5. The structure is
responsible for the very strongly carbon–carbon bonds, resulting in its several unique properties
including extreme high hardness, very high thermal conductivity, large band gap, and chemical
inertness, etc. [151–155]. Therefore, metastable diamond is viewed as an ideal material for many
applications [156–170] due to its particular properties mentioned above. On the other hand, these
unique properties have therefore led to considerable efforts to create diamond since the first report of
diamonds synthesized through a high-pressure and high-temperature process (HPHT) [171]. Up to
date, the syntheses of diamonds include HPHT [171], CVD [162], shock-wave method [172], pulsed-
laser-induced liquid–solid interface reaction [173–176], hydrothermal synthesis and the reduction of
carbide (HSRC) [177–184], and so on. Interestingly, the diamond nucleation upon CVD and HSRC are
in the strongly unstable phase regions of the metastable structural states on the basis of the general
accepted thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of carbon [185]. However, these cases seem to be
paradoxes from the thermodynamic point of view, because they contradict the fundamental principle
of the chemical thermodynamics. Why can diamonds form in the strongly unstable regions of the
structural state? For this issue, first of all, we will review this case in the next section.
4.1. CVD diamond
4.1.1. Historical aspects of CVD diamond
Before starting the analysis of the nucleation of CVD diamonds using our thermodynamic model,
let us look back the historical aspects of CVD diamonds. In 1961 [186], Eversole found the first
method of CVD diamonds under the low pressure by employing the developed cyclic process. In 1967,
Angus et al. extended Eversole’s work and deposited diamonds on virgin, natural diamond powders
from the methane gas at 1050 8C and 0.3 Torr [187]. In 1976 [188], Eversole’s work was further
174 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 5. Diamond can be viewed as two interpenetrating face-centered cubic lattices shifted along the body diagonal by (1/4,1/4, 1/4)a, where a is the dimension of the cubic (mineralogical) unit cell.
expanded by Deryaguin et al. who performed the careful physical chemistry experiments and
published a set of very beautiful photos of diamond crystals grown from the vapor phase under
activated low pressures. However, the application of the cyclic pyrolysis method above is unrealistic
due to a very slow diamond deposition rate (�1 nm/h) or requirement of a diamond seed substrate. In
1982 [189], Matsumoto et al. overcame the bottlenecks of the growth velocity and substrate, and led to
the application of CVD diamonds becoming realistic. They grew the diamond films onto the non-
diamond substrate and obtained a high growth velocity by employing hot filaments (�2000 8C) todirectly activate the hydrogen and hydrocarbon, which are passed through the hot filament. Before
long, the new activated diamond technology has been widely applied and became an important
research project through the whole world [190], and various activating methods for CVD diamonds
such as dc-plasma, rf-plasma, microwave plasma, electron cyclotron resonance-microwave plasma
CVD (ECR-MPCVD), and their modifications have been developed [191].
However, the important innovation of the synthesis of diamond under low-pressure conditions
was generally acknowledged until the middle of 1980s due to diamond being the metastable phase
under the low-pressure on the basis of the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of carbon. In the
early days of the synthesis of diamond under the low pressure, few people accepted the case, and even
it had been joked as ‘‘alchemy’’ [192], because it was regarded as ‘‘thermodynamic paradox,’’ and
maybe ‘‘violating the second law of thermodynamics’’ [148,193–196]. Up to date, most of explana-
tions for the formation of CVD diamonds are that the atomic hydrogen plays an important role by the
hydrogen activation process [197–201]. Namely, their hypothesis is based on the preferential etching
of graphite over diamond by the atomic hydrogen [197,198]. Then, Yarbrough [196] indicated that the
atomic hydrogen hypothesis is contrary to the thermodynamic concept. Nevertheless, the atomic
hydrogen hypothesis seems to be most frequently quoted [148]. Furthermore, several models attempt
to explain the formation of CVD diamonds using the exclusively kinetics [202,203]. However, as
Piekarczyk described [194], ‘‘However, a chemical process cannot proceed if it is thermodynamically
impossible, even though it is kinetically favored. Kinetics should be exercised within thermodynamics
and never go against it.’’
In thermodynamic aspects, several qualitative models have been proposed so far, respectively,
i.e., Sommer’s quasi-equilibrium model [204], Yarbrough’s surface reaction model [205], Bar-Yam’s
defects-induced stabilization model [206], Hwang’s charged cluster model [207,208], and Wang’s
chemical pump model [190,193,209–211], and so on. However, none of these models clearly gives a
completely satisfying insight into the formation of CVD diamonds, each model just tended to focus on
one aspect of the complicated process of the CVD diamond nucleation [212].
4.1.2. Nanothermodynamic analyses of CVD diamond nucleation
Generally, CVD diamond is usually a typical quasi-equilibrium process [41], and the pressure is
in the range of 102–105 Pa and temperature is in the range of 1000–1300 K [212]. In the carbon phase
diagram shown in Fig. 6 [185], the general thermodynamic region of the diamond nucleation upon
CVD is shown as G region, which belongs to the strongly unstable or metastable region of the diamond
structural state, i.e., the stable region of graphite structural state. It is well known that the graphite
nucleation would be prior to diamond nucleation in the G region from the point of view of
thermodynamics. Therefore, the diamond nucleation would not happen unless the graphite nucleation
is restrained or stopped. For the issue, the most popular explanation is that the atomic hydrogen plays
an important role. Atomic hydrogen is an essential factor in CVD diamonds due to its higher etching
rate for the graphite phase and less etching rate for the diamond phase. Unfortunately, some
researchers have reported that diamond films are grown upon CVD with a hydrogen-free environment
[213–215]. Further, Gruen [216] concluded that CVD diamonds do not require the reactant gas
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 175
mixtures consisting primarily of hydrogen, and the microstructure of diamond films can change
continuously from micro- to nanocrystalline when hydrogen is successively replaced by a noble gas
such as argon. Moreover, they pointed out that a chief function of the atomic hydrogen is to reduce the
secondary nucleation rates. Therefore, these experiments clearly indicate that, besides enhancing the
growth of the diamond nuclei, the atomic hydrogen may have little function for the diamond primary
nucleation [216]. Our question is: would the diamond nucleation be really in the strongly unstable
region of the diamond structural phase upon CVD?
The nucleation of CVD diamonds should happen in the D region of Fig. 6 on the basis of the
nanosize-induced additional pressure. When we assume the surface tension of diamond is 3.7 J/m2
[217], the dependence relationships of the nanosize-induced additional pressure based on the Laplace–
Young equation and the size of diamond clusters can be obtained, as shown in the inset of Fig. 6. From
the inset, one can see that the additional pressure increases with the crystal particle’s size decreasing.
Notably, when the radius is less than 4 nm, the additional pressure goes up to above 2.0 GPa, which is
above the phase equilibrium line shown as the D region, i.e., the diamond stable region, in Fig. 6. In
other words, the nanosize-induced additional pressure could drive the metastable region (G region) of
the diamond nucleation into the new stable region (D region) in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase
diagram of carbon. These deductions are supported by the experimental cases from the CVD diamonds
on non-diamond substrates [218–220]. For instance, Lee et al. reported that the size of the nuclei of
CVD diamonds on Si substrates is in the range of 2–6 nm [219]. Consequently, the nanosize-induced
additional pressure of 1–3 nm radius of the diamond nuclei would be enough to drive the G region into
the D region in Fig. 6. Therefore, the nucleation of CVD diamonds should happen in the D region in
Fig. 6 based on our nanothermodynamic approach. In the next section, we will take into account the
CVD diamond nucleation on silicon substrates as an example to present a quantitative description
based on the aforementioned thermodynamic model of MPNUR [41,221].
According to Eq. (3.34), g = 3.7 J/m2 [217], Vm = 3.417 � 10�6 m3 mol�1 [45], DV = 1.77 �10�6 m3 mol�1 [45], k0 = 2.01 � 106 [45], and b0 = 2.02 � 109 Pa [45], one can obtain the relation-
ship curves between the size of the diamond critical nuclei and the pressure at the temperature of
1300 K upon the CVD diamond case, and it is displayed in Fig. 7, in which the inset shows the
dependent relations of the pressure and the critical radius at the given various temperatures. Clearly,
we can see that the radii of the critical nuclei are less than 5 nm in a broad range of the pressure
176 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 6. Carbon thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram. The G region means a metastable phase region of the diamondnucleation upon CVD; the D region means a new stable phase region of the CVD diamond nucleation with respect to theeffect of the nanosize-induced additional pressure. The inset shows the relationship between the nanosize-induced additionalpressure and the nuclei size (after [41]).
and temperature. The diamond nucleation upon CVD seems to be in the stable phase region of
diamond due to the driving of the nanosize-induced additional pressure of the diamond nuclei. In
addition, from this figure, one also can see the very weak dependence of the pressure on the critical
radius. In other words, at the given temperatures, the critical radii are hardly changed with the external
pressure change, because the external pressure is quite small compared with the nanosize-induced
additional pressure.
Based on Eq. (3.35), the value of the surface tension of silicon (1.24 J/m2) [45], and the given
parameters above, we display the relationship curves between the pressure and the critical energy of
CVD diamonds at the temperature of 1200 K, as shown in Fig. 8, in which the inset displays the
dependent relations of the pressure on the critical energy at the given various temperature. Obviously,
one can see in Fig. 8 that the critical energy of the diamond nuclei slowly increases with the pressure
increasing at a given temperature, and approximately remains as unchanged. The case results from the
too little external pressure compared with the nanosize-induced additional pressure. These results
indicate that the critical energy of the diamond nucleation upon CVD is quite low (10�16 J), suggesting
that the heterogeneous nucleation of CVD diamonds does not require high forming energy.
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 177
Fig. 7. The relationship curves between the radii of the critical nuclei and the pressure at the temperature of 1300 K uponCVD systems. The inset shows the dependence relation of the pressure and the critical radii at given various temperatures.One can see that, in faith, the radii of the critical nuclei of diamond upon CVD for a broad range of pressures andtemperatures are less than 5 nm. Namely, the nucleation of CVD diamond could occur in the stable phase region of diamond(after [221]).
Fig. 8. The relationship curves between the pressure and the critical energy of the nucleation upon CVD diamond at thetemperature of 1200 K, and the inset showing the curves at various given temperatures (after [221]).
Apparently, the low forming energy of the heterogeneous nucleation of CVD diamonds implies that it
is not difficult to nucleate diamond, and the diamond nucleation could happen in the diamond stable
region (G region) as shown in Fig. 6. Based on the analyses above, the diamond nucleation upon CVD
would happen in the diamond stable region in the carbon phase diagram from the point of view of
thermodynamics. In fact, when the size of the crystalline particles is in the nanometer scale, the
additional pressure induced by the curvature of the nanometer-sized particles is so high as to exceed
the equilibrium pressure between diamond and graphite, i.e., going up to break through the phase
equilibrium boundary line, which means that the additional pressure could drive the thermodynamic
phase region of the diamond nucleation from the metastable to the stable as shown in Fig. 6. Therefore,
the diamond nucleation upon CVD is not actually the ‘‘thermodynamic paradox,’’ and ‘‘violating the
second law of thermodynamics.’’ These results indicate that the presence of the atomic hydrogen is not
a vital factor to grow diamonds upon CVD from the viewpoint of the nanothermodynamics above.
However, why did most experimental studies all show that the atomic hydrogen plays a very important
role in CVD diamonds? In fact, it is recognized experimental evidence that the atomic hydrogen
etching the graphite phase (more etching rate to the graphite phase and less etching rate to the diamond
phase) and helping the sp3 hybridization of carbon atoms [218]. Naturally, the diamond nucleation
could be enhanced in the low-pressure gas, only when the graphite phase forming is restrained or
stopped by the atomic hydrogen or other factors. Thus, the presence of the atomic hydrogen could
increase the rates of the diamond growth. Accordingly, the effect of the atomic hydrogen on the
diamond growth is much more larger than that on the diamond nucleation upon CVD [222]. In other
words, the influence of the atomic hydrogen on the diamond nucleation would be small from the point
of view of the experimental investigations involved in how to enhance the diamond nucleation upon
CVD [162].
In conclusion, aiming at a clear insight into the nucleation of CVD diamonds, we studied the
diamond nucleation from the point of the view of a nanoscaled thermodynamics. Notably, these
theoretical results show that the diamond nucleation would happen in the stable phase region of
diamond in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of carbon, due to the nanosized effect
induced by the curvature–surface tension of the diamond nuclei. In other words, at the nanometer size,
the diamond nucleation is prior to the graphite nucleation in competing growth of diamond and
graphite upon CVD.
4.2. Diamond formation in the hydrothermal synthesis and reduction of carbide systems
Recently, the important progress of the diamond syntheses has been made by HSRC [177–184].
By using diamond seeds, Syzmanski et al. [177] synthesized diamonds by the hydrothermal synthesis
in the different supercritical-fluid systems in 1995, and Gogotsi et al. almost simultaneously prepared
diamonds by using the containing-carbon-element water solution in the hydrothermal synthesis
[178,179]. Following Syzmanski and Gogotsi, a few groups have synthesized diamonds by the
hydrothermal synthesis without diamond seeds, in which the non-diamond carbon and various
carbides with chlorine or supercritical-fluid water solution containing hydrogen were used as raw
materials [179–181]. Furthermore, without chlorine and supercritical-fluid water solution containing
hydrogen, Lou et al. synthesized diamonds through the reduction of carbon dioxide and reduction of
magnesium carbonate with metallic supercritical-fluid sodium [183,184]. However, compared with
the rapid experimental progress of the diamond synthesis by HSRC, the thermodynamic nucleation of
diamond upon HSRC supercritical-fluid systems still has much less theoretical understanding, so far.
For instance, the phase region that diamonds are synthesized by HSRC is in the range of 713–1273 K
and 0.1–200 MPa [179,181–184]. Then, the phase region is located below the boundary line between
178 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
diamond and graphite, i.e., so-called Bundy’s line (B line), in the carbon thermodynamic equilibrium
phase diagram as shown in Fig. 9 [45]. Note that the carbon phase diagram proposed by Bundy has
been generally accepted, so far. In other words, the diamond nucleation would not be expected to take
place in the phase regions created by HSRC in the carbon phase diagram, because the diamond phase is
metastable and the graphite phase is stable in the phase region mentioned above. Why would the
results of the diamond synthesis in HSRC systems not be consistent with the prediction of the carbon
thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram? The convincing understanding for this issue has not been
reached yet. To our best knowledge, few studies concerning the thermodynamic nucleation of
diamonds upon HSRC are found in the literature.
To gain a better understanding to the diamond nucleation upon HSRC supercritical-fluid systems
from the point of view of thermodynamics, we proposed the nanothermodynamic analysis to address
the seed-free diamond nucleation upon HSRC based on the thermodynamics of MNPUR mentioned
above. It is noticed that the size of the diamond critical nuclei is limited in the range of several
nanometers upon CVD [219,220], and the supercritical-fluid systems are suggested to have the liquid-
like densities but gas-like properties [223]. It is therefore a convincing suggestion that the size of the
diamond critical nuclei should be limited within several nanometers in the HSRC supercritical-fluid
systems [180]. According to the established thermodynamic model, we first calculated the size and the
forming energy of the critical nucleation of diamond upon HSRC, respectively, in which all data are
from the securable literatures about the diamond synthesis in the HSRC supercritical-fluid systems.
More importantly, our theoretical results are consistent with the experiment data and other calculations
from first-principles [180,224,225].
In detail, on the basis of Eq. (3.34) and the aforementioned thermodynamic parameters, we show
the relationship curves between the size of the critical nucleation and the pressure at various
temperatures in Fig. 10. Then, it is noticed that the data points of the symbols (~, $, !, &,
and ^) derived from Refs. [183,184,181,179,182], respectively. Clearly, one can see that the size of
the diamond nuclei increases with the pressure increasing at a given temperature, and decreases with
the temperature increasing at the certain pressure in Fig. 10. In addition, we can see that the sizes of the
critical nucleation are close to a constant at the pressures below 400 MPa under the condition of the
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 179
Fig. 9. Carbon thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram based on pressure and temperature. G region means a metastablephase region of diamond nucleation; D region means a new stable phase region of the diamond nucleation by thehydrothermal synthesis or reduction of carbide under the nanosize-induced interior pressure conditions. The inset shows theenlarged G and D regions. The data point of the symbols (~, $, !, &, and ^) of the G region derived from Refs.[183,184,181,179,182], respectively (after [45]).
certain temperature. However, the sizes of the critical nuclei increase quickly when the pressures
exceed 400 MPa. These results indicate that 400 MPa seems to be a pressure threshold for the diamond
synthesis by HSRC, and the corresponding size of the diamond critical nuclei is about 5 nm. Our
theoretical results are not only in excellent agreement with Kraft et al. experimental results, but also
good consistent with Badziag and Winter’s calculations from the first-principle [181,224,225]. The
first-principle calculations suggested that when the size of carbon clusters is in the range of 3–5 nm,
the diamond phase should be thermodynamically more stable than graphite phase [224,225].
In terms of Eq. (3.35) and the given the value of f(u), we display the relationship curves of the
nucleation energy of the diamond critical nuclei and the pressure at the conditions of the various
temperatures and the heterogeneous factor equaling to 0.5, and as the evidence shown in Fig. 11.
Similarly, one can see that the forming energy of the critical nuclei increases with the pressure
increasing at the given temperature and the heterogeneous factor, and the values of the nucleation
energy of the critical nuclei decrease with the temperature increasing at a given pressure in Fig. 11. In
addition, we can see that the values of the nucleation energy are close to a constant at the pressures
below 400 MPa under the certain temperature. However, the values of the nucleation energy of the
critical nuclei greatly increase when the pressures exceed 400 MPa. Importantly, these results show
180 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 10. The relationship curves between the size of the critical nucleation and the pressure at various temperatures. The datapoint of the symbols (~, $, !, &, and ^) derived from Refs. [183,184,181,179,182], respectively (after [45]).
Fig. 11. The relationship curves of the critical energy and the pressure at various temperatures (the heterogenous factor is0.5) under considering the nanosize-induced interior pressure condition. The inset shows the relationship curves of thecritical energy and the heterogeneous factor at the given pressure and temperature. The data point of the symbols (~,$,!,&, and ^) derived from Refs. [183,184,181,179,182], respectively (after [45]).
that the diamond nucleation upon HSRC need not be the relatively high nucleation energy when the
pressure is less than 400 MPa, or the size of the critical nuclei is less than 5 nm. Apparently, the low
nucleation energy of diamond inHSRC suggests that it is not difficult for the diamond nucleation to take
place upon HSRC. Therefore, the diamond nucleation of HSRC seems to happen in the stable phase
region of diamond, i.e., the D region as shown in Fig. 9, based on our thermodynamic theory. As a
comparison, we give the relationship curves of the nucleation energy of diamond and the heterogeneous
factor at the given pressure and temperature in inset of Fig. 11. From the inset, one can see that the
nucleation energy increases with the heterogeneous factor increasing. Eventually, from Figs. 10 and 11,
we can predict that 400 MPa should be the threshold pressure for the diamond synthesis by HSRC in the
metastable phase region of diamond in the carbon phase diagram. The diamond synthesis would thus
hardly take place in the thermodynamicmetastable phase region of diamond in the carbon phase diagram
when the pressure of HSRC exceeds 400 MPa. In fact, all pressures carried out in the diamond synthesis
by HSRC are less than 400 MPa in the present literatures.
More recently, it has been reported that various kinds of precursors containing carbon such as
SiC, CO2, MgCO3, etc., are used to synthesize diamonds in hydrogen or hydrogen-free systems in the
thermodynamic metastable region of diamond of the carbon phase diagram by HSRC [182–184].
From these experiments mentioned above, we can deduce that hydrogen is not essential for the
diamond nucleation upon HSRC. Similar evidence has existed in CVD diamonds. On the other hand,
the nucleation kinetics of the diamond synthesis from the SiC reduction in HSRC suggested that Si is
extracted from SiC to result in the residual carbon structures forming carbon atoms in the sp3
hybridization by kinetic regime. In addition, the diamond formation from CO2 in HSRC could deduce
that the reductant first combines with oxygen, and then carbon atoms form sp3 hybrid bonds by
complicated chemistry and physics processes. Therefore, it should be noted that the diamond
nucleation upon HSRC is the relatively complicated chemical and physical process just like
CVD. The detailed kinetics has not been fully understood yet.
Following Gleiter [226,227], many chemical and physical routes under the conditions of the
moderate temperatures and pressures are generally used to synthesize nanocrystals with metastable
structures. However, the corresponding bulk materials with the same metastable phases are prepared
under the conditions of the high temperatures or high pressures. Definitely, the nanosized effect of nano-
crystals should be responsible for the formation of these metastable structures at the nanometer scale.
The above theoretical results display that the diamond nucleation upon HSRC would happen in
the stable phase region of diamond in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of carbon.
Furthermore, the threshold pressure of 400 MPa is predicted for the diamond synthesis in the
metastable phase region of diamond by HSRC.
4.3. Diamond nanowires growth inside nanotubes
One-dimensional nanostructures such as wires, rods, belts, and tubes have become the focus
of intensive research owing to their unique applications in mesoscopis physics and fabrication of
nanoscale devices. For instance, they not only provide a good system to study the electrical and
thermal transport in one-dimensional confinement, but also are expected to play an important role in
both interconnection and functional units in fabricating electronic, optoelectronic, and magnetic
storage devices with nanoscaled dimension [228]. Recently, one-dimensional nanostructures of
diamond have received intensively increasing interesting in theoretical [229–234], even though
any successful syntheses of diamond nanowires (DNWs) have not been found in the literature yet. For
example, diamond nanorods are expected to be an important and viable target structure for synthesis,
due to stronger than fullerene nanotubes [231]. In this section, we therefore propose a thermodynamic
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 181
nucleation and kinetic growth approach at the nanoscale under the consideration of the effect of the
surface tension induced by the nanosized curvature conditions.
Based on the nanothermodynamic nucleation [41–48], we herein theoretically perform the
formation of DNWs inside nanotubes upon CVD. This theoretical model is formulated based on the
assumptions: (i) the nanoscale nuclei are perfectly spherical without the structural deformation
comparison with the bulk one; (ii) the nanoscaled nuclei are mutually non-interaction. The schematic
illustration of a DNW grown in a nanotube upon CVD is shown in Fig. 12. When the reactant gases
CH4 and H2 flow along the nanotube, the carbon clusters are condensed on the inner wall in the
nanotube by a series of the surface reactions and diffusions. Sequentially, the diamond nucleation will
occur inside the nanotube by the phase transition. Now, we discuss the nucleation of carbon clusters
with diamond structure inside nanotubes. Thermodynamically, the phase transformation is promoted
by the difference of the free energies. The Gibbs free energy of a phase can be expressed as a function
of the pressure and temperature, and determined by a general coordinate or reactive coordinate [174].
The Gibbs free energy difference of a cluster can be expressed as
DG ¼ ðssc � ssvÞS1 þ scvS2 þ DgvV (4.1)
where ssc, ssv, and scv are the substrate–nucleus, the substrate–vapor, and the nucleus–vapor interfaceenergy, S1 and S2 the corresponding interface areas (as shown in Fig. 12(b)), V the volume of the
182 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 12. Schematic illustration of a DNW nucleation and grown inside a SiNT. (a) A diamond nucleus on the inner wall of ananotube. (b) The cross-section of the case (a), S1 and S2 are the areas of the substrate–nucleus and nucleus–vapor interfaces,respectively. (c) A diamond nucleus on the surface of a Si substrate. (d) A DNW grown inside a nanotube (after [47]).
diamond clusters, andDgv is the Gibbs free energy difference per unit volume, which can be expressed
by [47]
Dgv ¼ � RT
Vm lnðP=PeÞ(4.2)
where P and T are the pressure and temperature upon CVD, and ln(P/Pe) = 0.8 [46]. Pe is the
equilibrium-vapor pressure of diamond, R the gas constant, and Vm is mole volume of diamond.
Further, considering the effect of the surface tension induced by the nanoscaled curvatures of the
diamond nuclei and nanotubes upon CVD, applying the Laplace–Young equation and the Kelvin
equation, Dgv can be expressed as:
Dgv ¼ � 1
2
RT
Vm
�ln
P
Pe
� �þ scv
1
rþ 1
r0
� ��(4.3)
where r and r0 are the radii of the nanotube and the diamond cluster, respectively. Therefore,
substituting these relations, i.e., Eqs. (4.2) and (4.3), into Eq. (4.1), we attain the Gibbs free energy of
the formation of diamond clusters inside nanotubes. Note that one can see that the values of S1, S2, and
V in Eq. (4.1) can be determined when the radii of the nanotube and the spherical nuclei are given.
However, it is not easy in our case to obtain the analytical expressions of S1, S2, and V. Accordingly, it
is not easy to deduce the analytical expression of the critical radius and the forming energy of an
atomic cluster with diamond structure inside a nanotube. Therefore, in the case [48], we calculated
the critical radius and the forming energy of a diamond cluster inside the nanotube by a numerical
method.
It is well known that the thermodynamic nucleation just provides the probability for the formation
of DNWs inside nanotubes upon CVD. On the other hand, the kinetic growth will play a key role in the
achievement of the probability, when the thermodynamics operates. We therefore develop a growth
kinetic approach to the growth of DNWs inside nanotubes upon CVD, based on the growth kinetics of
one-dimensional nanostructures inside nanotubes [46], which originates fromWilson–Frenkel growth
law [235,236]. Generally, the growth velocity Vs of the crystalline nucleus can be expressed as [47]:
Vs ¼ hn exp�Ea
RT
� �1� exp
�jDgjRT
� �� �(4.4)
where h, n, and Ea are the lattice constant of the crystalline nucleus in the growth direction, the thermal
vibration frequency, the mole adsorption energy of adatoms attached at the surface sites, the R, and T
are defined by Eq. (4.3). The Dg is the Gibbs free energy difference per mole. According to Eq. (4.3),
Dg can be denoted by
Dg ¼ � 1
2RT ln
P
Pe
� �þ scvM
R0r
�þ scvM
rr
�(4.5)
where M, R0, r, and r are the mole mass of diamond, the curvature radius of the diamond nucleus, the
radius of the nanotube, and the density of diamond, respectively.
In order to validate the models above, based on the sufficient securable thermodynamic
parameters, we take DNWs growth in silicon nanotubes (SiNTs) upon CVD as an example to check
its operation. From Fig. 12(d), one can see that R0 = �r/cos u, and cos u ¼ ssv�sscscv
, in which u is thecontact angle between the diamond nucleus and the wall of a SiNT. When the growth direction of
DNWs is assured along the (1 0 0) direction, h, n, and Ea are 0.218 nm, �2.5 � 1013 Hz, and
�2.4 � 105 J/mol, respectively [237–239]. According to Eqs. (4.1) and (4.3), one can obtain the
comparison curves of the free energy of the diamond nucleation between inside a SiNTand on a flat Si
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 183
substrate under various given temperature conditions in Fig. 13. Meanwhile, the dependence of the
critical radius of the diamond nucleus inside a SiNT on the radius of the SiNT under various given
temperature conditions is shown Fig. 14. Clearly, one can see, comparing the nucleation barrier of the
diamond nuclei inside SiNTs with that on a flat Si substrate, the former is much less than the latter,
from Fig. 13. In other words, the diamond nucleation inside SiNTs would be preferable to that on the
flat Si substrates, due to the effect of the surface tension induced by the nanosized curvatures of the
nanotubes and the critical nuclei. On the other hand, it can be found from Fig. 13 that with increasing
the substrate temperature, the nucleation barrier and the critical radius of the diamond nucleation (the
R corresponding to peak value in Fig. 13) will increase. The result indicates that the decrease of the
substrate temperature (in the limited range) is favorable for the nucleation of diamond. Importantly,
these results are consistent with the experiment cases of the diamond nucleation on a flat Si substrate
by CVD [240–242]. Furthermore, we can see that the radius of the diamond critical nucleus increases
with the radius of SiNTs increasing from Fig. 14. Apparently, these results indicate that the diamond
nucleation is relatively easy inside SiNTs with fewer radii. Similarly, one can see from Fig. 14 that
with increasing of the substrate temperature, the critical radius of the diamond nucleation will
184 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 13. The comparison of the free energy of the diamond nucleation between in a SiNT and on a flat Si substrate undervarious given temperature conditions, and the radius of a SiNT, r = 5 nm (after [47]).
Fig. 14. The dependence of the critical radius of the diamond nucleus inside a SiNTon the radius of the SiNTat various giventemperatures (after [47]).
increase, suggesting that the diamond nuclei are relative stable at the low substrate temperature (in the
limited range). Note that these theoretical results are in agreement with the experiment cases of
diamond nucleation on a flat Si substrate [240–242].
According to Eqs. (4.4) and (4.5), we can attain the relationship curve between the growth
velocity of DNWs and the radius of SiNTs in Fig. 15. Clearly, from Fig. 15, one can see that the growth
velocity of DNWs inside the SiNTs increases with the radius of the SiNT decreasing at given
deposition temperatures. Definitely, when r < 10 nm, the increasing of the growth velocity goes to
much high with the radius of the SiNT continually decreasing. When r > 10 nm, and the decreasing of
the growth rate becomes apparent. In fact, the growth of DNWs seems not correlative with the size of
SiNTs when the radius of SiNTs goes to too large. In addition, the growth rate of CVD diamond films
based on the Wilson–Frenkel equation is also shown in Fig. 15. Clearly, the calculated value of the
growth rate of CVD diamond films on a flat Si substrate is in good agreement with the experiment
cases [243–245]. Further, it can be seen that the growth rate of DNWs inside SiNTs is close to the
growth rate of CVD diamond films when the radius of SiNTs is more than 100 nm. In other words, the
growth rate of DNWs inside SiNTs is nearly the same as one of CVD diamond films on a flat Si
substrate when the radius of the SiNTs is large enough.
In summary, based on a thermodynamic nucleation on nanoscale, we found out that the diamond
nucleation inside SiNTs would be energetically preferable to that on the flat surface of silicon wafers,
due to the nanosized effect induced by the curvature of the nanotubes and the critical nuclei upon
CVD. Meanwhile, in kinetic, the growth rate of DNWs inside SiNTs would go to much high once the
diamond nuclei forming inside SiNTs. Therefore, considering the fabrication of the near-perfect one-
dimensional nanoscaled device consisted of DNWs and SiNTs, we expected SiNTs to be a template to
grow the DNWs by CVD.
5. Cubic boron nitride nucleation in the unstable regions of the structural state
Cubic BN, a pure artificial III–V compound and structural properties similar to cubic diamond, as
shown in Fig. 16, has attracted great interest due to its outstanding physical and chemical natures such
as the second to diamond hardness, high thermal stability, and chemical inert [246], since it was for the
first time synthesized successfully using the high-pressure and high-temperatures method with a help
of a suitable catalyst (which is similar to the synthesis of diamond) in 1957 by Wentorf [247]. In the
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 185
Fig. 15. The relationship curve between the growth velocity of DNWand the radius of SiNTs, and the comparison with thecase of CVD diamond films on the Si substrate (after [47]).
past several decades, many methods have been developed to create c-BN except HPHT, such as CVD
[248–252], pulsed-laser deposition (PLD) [253–259], physical vapor deposition (PVD) [260–264],
hydrothermal synthesis [265–270], pulsed-laser induced liquid–solid interface reaction [271,272], and
direct current arc discharge method [273], and so on. Most experimental preparations take place above
the unstable phase region of c-BN in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of boron nitride.
However, to date, thermodynamics of the nucleation of c-BN remains much less understood and
largely relies on trial and error. In this section, we will take the c-BN nucleation upon CVD and
supercritical-fluid systems as examples to quantitatively describe the nucleation thermodynamics in
the light of the MPNUR model.
5.1. Nucleation of CVD cubic boron nitride
Cubic BN films are typically grown as a thermodynamic metastable phase by the means of the
low-pressure CVD over the last 20 years [193,274]. Although much significant progress has been
made in the intensive research and developed in the past few years, the preparation of the single
crystalline c-BN films still remains a great challenge for physicists and materials scientists [275].
Actually, the nucleation of CVD c-BN is a complicated chemical and physical process. In order to
provide a qualitative description of the c-BN nucleation, six different models have ever been proposed
so far, respectively, i.e., the compressive stress model [276–278], the dynamic stress model [279–282],
the preferential sputter model [283,284], the subplantation model [285–288], the cylindrical thermal
spike model [289–291], and the nanoarches model [292]. However, none of those models could clearly
give a completely satisfying picture of the c-BN formation, and each model just tended to focus on one
aspect of the complicated process of the nucleation of CVD c-BN [275]. There have been several
excellent review papers surveying current theories of the c-BN nucleation [274,275,292], in which
they pointed out that the c-BN nucleation occurs by a mechanism that the structural changes are
accomplished by the high compressive stress of several GPa and the growth of a layered structure
consisting of an amorphous (a-BN) interface. After the interlayers are grown on a substrate, the
hydrostatic component of the compress stress is sufficient to place the growth conditions inside the c-
BN stable zone (C zone of Fig. 17) in the range from 500 to 1300 K, using the Corrigan–Bundy’s line
[293] to define the phase boundary [277], as shown in Fig. 17. Moreover, a lot of literature employs the
compress stress model to explain the nucleation of c-BN [276–278,294,295]. However, few studies
186 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 16. Sketch map of c-BN of a diamond-like material with a zinc-blende crystal structure.
have involved in the nucleation thermodynamics at the nanometer size. In this review, we thus focus on
the thermodynamic description of the nucleation of CVD c-BN in terms of the model of MPNUR.
It is well known that CVD could be considered to be close to the thermodynamic equilibrium
process, the typical thermodynamic parameters of CVD c-BN are that the pressure is a few Torr and
the temperature is about 500–1300 K [278,296–298]. In the boron nitride thermodynamic equilibrium
phase diagram (Fig. 17), the general thermodynamic region of the c-BN grown upon CVD is shown as
the H region, which belongs to the metastable region of c-BN phase, i.e., the stable region of h-BN
phase. Under the assumption of spherical, isotropic c-BN nanocrystals, the size-induced additional
pressure would drive the metastable phase into the stable region of c-BN phase (C region of Fig. 17).
According to the Laplace–Young equation (the surface tension g = 4.72 J/m2 for c-BN [299]), we can
obtain the dependence of the radius of the c-BN nuclei on the additional pressure, as shown in the inset
of Fig. 17. Distinctly, one can see that the additional pressure increases with the crystal particle’s size
decreasing. Notably, in the size range below several nanometers, the additional pressure goes up to
above several gigaPascal, which is above the C–B line shown as the C region [293], i.e., the stable
region of c-BN phase in Fig. 17.
In principle, Eq. (3.35) should give the relationship curves of the forming energy of the nuclei and
the temperature. However, we could not obtain the curve due to the uncertain surface energy of the
interlayers. In order to find out the relationship curve of the forming energy and the temperature under
the conditions of the given additional pressure, we supposed that c-BN directly nucleates on Si
substrates (the value of the surface energy of silicon for 1.24 J/m2 [299]). Thus, we attain the forming
energy curves of the c-BN nuclei with the size effect, as shown in Fig. 18 [299]. Clearly, we can see in
Fig. 18 that the forming energy of the c-BN nuclei decreases with the temperature increasing at a given
pressure, and increases with the pressure increasing. Therefore, these results show that the nucleation
of CVD c-BN does not need the relatively high forming energy. Apparently, the low forming energy of
the c-BN nucleation upon CVD implies that it is not difficult to the c-BN nucleation, and the c-BN
nucleation seems to happen in the c-BN stable phase region (C region) as shown in Fig. 17.
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 187
Fig. 17. Boron nitride thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram and the relationship curve between the nanosize-inducedadditional pressure and the nuclei size (as an inset). H region means a metastable phase region of the nucleation upon CVD c-BN; C region means a new stable phase region of the c-BN nucleation with respect to the effect of the nanosize-inducedadditional pressure (after [299]).
On the other hand, according to Eq. (3.34), one can calculate the relationship curves of the
forming energy and the heterogeneous factor of f(u) under the conditions of the given additional
pressure and temperature, as shown in Fig. 19 [299]. It is noticed that the different heterogeneous
factors f(u) represent the different interlayers between the c-BN nuclei and the substrate. From Fig. 19,
we can find that the forming energy increased with f(u) increased. The result indicates that the low
interfacial energy between the nuclei and the interlayer is advantageous to the nucleation of c-BN.
Thus, the c-BN nucleation would be preferred on those substrates that have lower lattice mismatch
with c-BN, which would be one of the physical origins of the interlayers grown for CVD c-BN.
Actually, a characteristic nucleation sequence a-BN! textured h-BN (c-axis parallel to the sub-
strate) ! c-BN has been established to precede the c-BN-growth, observed by Kester et al. [300,301],
and their experimental results indicated that the nucleation of c-BN on the surface of the interlayer not
only relies on the combined effect of a 2:3 lattice matching between h-BN and c-BN, but also concerns
in h-BN density on the surface of interlayers, i.e., so-called ‘‘h-BN densify.’’ Naturally, ‘‘h-BN
densify’’ would result in the surface energy of the interlayer increasing, and then, the heterogeneous
factor (f(u)) would be decreased from our calculations.
Since the phase transition is determined quantitatively by the probability of the h-BN molecules
crossing a potential barrier of intermediate phase [174]. According to Eq. (3.36) and the securable
188 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 18. Under the condition of the direct nucleation of c-BN on Si substrates, the relationship curve of the forming energyand the temperature in various nanosize-induced additional pressures (after [299]).
Fig. 19. The relationship curves between the forming energy and the heterogeneous factor under conditions of the nanosize-induced additional pressures and various temperatures (after [299]).
thermodynamics parameters (see Ref. [299]), one can obtain the probability curves of the h-BN–c-BN
transition in the new stable region of the temperature–pressure phase diagram of boron nitride when
r = 4.0 nm as shown in Fig. 20 [299]. It can be seen in Fig. 20 that the probability of the phase
transition from h-BN to c-BN is about 1.0 � 10�10 to 1.0 � 10�9 in the new stable region (C region in
Fig. 17). Actually, the probabilities of the h-BN to c-BN transition, 1.0 � 10�10 to 1.0 � 10�9, are
really low in the C region. Thus, the result implies that the c-BN nucleation density should be very low
during CVD, although it could happen. In fact, the deduction is in agreement with the experiment
evidence. (Attempts to grow c-BN by simple chemical process alone failed so far [302,303].)
Therefore, in order to enhance the probabilities of the h-BN to c-BN transition and promote the
c-BN nucleation density, many ways, e.g., electron cyclotron resonance, inductively coupled plasma
(ICP), and radio-frequency (rf), etc., are employed to assist CVD [274].
From the discussions above, one can see that the c-BN nucleation seems to happen in the stable
region of c-BN phase in the thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram of boron nitride based on the
thermodynamics of MPNUR, i.e., the c-BN nucleation would be prior to the h-BN nucleation in
competing growth of c-BN and h-BN upon CVD.
5.2. c-BN nucleation in high-pressure and high-temperature supercritical-fluid systems
Recently, the important progress of the c-BN synthesis by HPHT, which was developed by
Solozhenko and Singh et al., seems to break through the general accepted thermodynamic equilibrium
phase diagram of boron nitride proposed by Corrigan and Bundy. Solozhenko and Singh et al. for the
first time synthesized c-BN under the supercritical conditions using non-conventional catalysts such as
the volatile hydrazine NH2NH2 and MgB2 (so-called HPHT supercritical-fluid systems) in the phase
region that the pressure is in the range of 1.8–3.8 GPa and the temperature is in the range of 1200–
1600 K by HPHT [304–309]. Importantly, these phase regions are located below the C–B line of the
BN thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram, in which the c-BN phase is metastable and the h-BN
phase is stable. In other words, the c-BN synthesis would not be expected upon HPHT in these phase
regions (shown in Fig. 21). For this issue, according to the experiments and the theoretical calculations
based on a series of hypotheses, Solozhenko and coworkers suggested that the C–B line should move
down in the boron nitride thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram developed by Corrigan and
Bundy. Further, they proposed a new BN thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram to substitute for
the Corrigan–Bundy equilibrium phase diagram [304,310–312]. Would the Corrigan–Bundy equili-
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 189
Fig. 20. The probability of the h-BN to c-BN transition with respect to the effect of the nanosize-induced additional pressurein the new stable phase region (C region) of the c-BN nucleation upon CVD (above the C–B line) (after [299]).
brium phase diagram be really outdated for the c-BN synthesis by HPHT? In fact, it is an essential
issue involved in the fundamental thermodynamics in the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems of the
c-BN synthesis. To our best knowledge, there are hardly any thermodynamic descriptions concerned in
the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems, as the full understanding of the complicated interactivities
during the non-conventional catalyst/solvent synthesis has not been obtained in detail yet. Therefore,
the developed thermodynamic approach at the nanometer scale is used to address the formation of
c-BN upon the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems.
In fact, the nucleation and growth of c-BN are complicated in a flux of another material (so-called
‘‘catalyst’’) upon the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems. Generally, c-BN is considered to be the
spontaneous-crystallization in the so-called conventional ‘‘solvents–catalysts system’’ [313]. Actu-
ally, no matter what the conventional solvents–catalysts system or the supercritical-fluid systems, the
nucleation and growth of c-BN must meet simultaneously the conditions as follows: (i) the raw
material and catalyst molten in the system, (ii) the high-supersaturation raw material in the solvent
catalysts, and (iii) the ambient pressure (including the nanosize-induced additional pressure) and
temperature of the spontaneous-crystallization of c-BN clusters above the C–B line (or the sponta-
neous-crystallization of c-BN clusters is unstable). However, the results of Solozhenko and Singh et al.
[305–309] showed that the nucleation and growth of c-BN in a wide temperature and pressure ranges
in the supercritical-fluid systems (as shown in Fig. 21, the H region). Then, the case would be
impossible in the conventional solvents–catalysts system. Thus, it is reasonable that the structure of the
resulting solutions and the mechanism of the BN crystallization from these solutions are expected to be
heavily dependent on the fluid phase composition. Naturally, the results are incompatible with the
general accepted phase diagram proposed by Corrigan and Bundy.
On the other hand, since c-BN was synthesized by HPHT, many theoretical models have
discussed the nucleation and growth of c-BN upon HPHT. For example, the solid–solid transition
model thinks that h-BN melt in the catalyst solvent under the certain conditions of the pressure and
temperature, and then, the formation of the new solvent (BN-rich). Subsequently, the temperature
190 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 21. Boron nitride thermodynamic equilibrium phase diagram and the relationship curve between the nanosize-inducedinterior pressure and the nuclei size (as an inset). H region means a metastable phase region of c-BN nucleation; C regionmeans a new stable phase region of the c-BN nucleation with respect to the effect of nanosize-induced interior pressure (thedata of the square symbols of the H region derived from Ref. [311]) (after [42]).
increasing leads to the formation of a second compound that is more BN-rich compared with that
mentioned above. Finally, the new BN-rich compound formed under the high pressures and
temperatures becomes instable and decomposes into c-BN and another products (unknown structure
and composition yet) by the fast solid–solid transition process [314]. However, very recently,
Solozhenko [315] reported that the formation of any crystalline intermediate phases was not observed
from the beginning to the ending of the c-BN crystallization in NH4F–BN system, and only h-BN and a
melt coexist in the system by in situ measuring using X-ray diffraction with synchrotron radiation. In
addition, as aforementioned above, the supercritical-fluid may have liquid-like densities but gas-like
properties [223]. These cases made us revise the solid–solid transition model and allowed us to draw
some conclusions about the mechanism of the nucleation and growth of c-BN in the supercritical-fluid
systems based on the thermodynamic model of MPNUR.
According to Eq. (3.34) and the given macroscopic thermodynamic parameters [42], one can
deduce the relationship curves of the pressure and the critical radius of the c-BN nuclei at various given
temperatures, as shown in Fig. 22. Clearly, we can see that the critical radius ranges from 2.8 to 4.8 nm.
Importantly, these results are in agreement with the calculation values by the chemical potential
method [42]. Furthermore, Fig. 22 displays that the critical radius increases with the pressure
increasing at a given temperature, and increases with the temperature decreasing at a given pressure.
Actually, these results just indicate that the nanosize-induced additional pressure plays an important
role on the c-BN nucleation upon supercritical-fluid systems.
In the light of Eq. (3.35), the dependence of the forming energy of the c-BN nuclei on the pressure
at various given temperatures can be obtained, as shown in Fig. 23. Obviously, one can see that the
forming energy of the c-BN nuclei increases, when the total pressure (external and additional pressure)
is close to the C–B line. Thus, the result is in agreement with CNT. Namely, on the C–B line, c-BN
cannot nucleate. Importantly, these results show that the heterogeneous nucleation of c-BN does not
need the high forming energy in the supercritical-fluid systems. Apparently, the low forming energy of
the heterogeneous nucleation of c-BN implied that it is not difficult to the c-BN nucleation in
the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems, and the c-BN nucleation would happen in the stable phase
region (C region) of c-BN as shown in Fig. 21.
According to Eq. (3.36), we can obtain the probability curves of the h-BN to c-BN transition in
the new stable region of the temperature–pressure phase diagram of boron nitride when r = 1.6 nm as
shown in Fig. 24 [44]. The fc constant curves display a ‘V’-shape: one side approaches the Corrigan–
Bundy line and the other stands nearly vertical. Additionally, from Fig. 24, we can see that the values
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 191
Fig. 22. The dependence of the critical radius on the pressure at various given temperatures upon the supercritical-fluidsystems (after [44]).
of the phase transition probability from h-BN to c-BN are in the range of 1.0 � 10�8 to 1.0 � 10�7 in
the new stable phase region (C region in Fig. 21). Actually, the probabilities of the h-BN to c-BN
transition, 1.0 � 10�8 to 1.0 � 10�7, are really low in the C region. Thus, these results show that the
c-BN nucleation density should be low in the HPHT supercritical-fluids system, although it could
happen. In other words, the c-BN nucleation would not be favored in the HPHT supercritical-fluid
systems. In fact, these deductions are in agreement with the experiment evidence [316]. For instance,
recently, some attempts to repeat the Solozhenko’s experiment in the HPHT supercritical-fluid
systems did not meet with success by Gonna et al. [316]. On the other hand, based on the above
thermodynamic model, the dependence of the probability of the h-BN to c-BN transition on the
pressure under the conditions of T = 1500 K and r = 1.6 nm is shown in Fig. 25 [44]. It is clearly seen
that the shape of these curves in Fig. 25 is similar to that of the Arrhenius line, i.e., the probability of
the h-BN to c-BN phase transition is in agreement with the Arrhenius rule. Meanwhile, we can see that
the fc increases fast when the pressure is in the range 1.8–2.4 GPa, and then, it goes to saturation with
further increasing of the pressure.
In addition, we calculate the probability of the phase transition from h-BN to c-BN in the HPHT
supercritical-fluid systems without the consideration of the nanosize-induced additional pressure (i.e.,
192 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 23. The relationship curves between the external pressure and the forming energy upon the supercritical-fluid systems(after [44]).
Fig. 24. The probability of the phase transition from h-BN to c-BN upon the HPHT supercritical-fluids system under theconsideration of the nanosize-induced additional pressure conditions (i.e., the phase transition probability of the C region inFig. 21) (after [44]).
the phase transition probability of the H region in Fig. 21), as shown in Fig. 26 [44]. Interestingly, from
Fig. 26, one can see that the values of the phase transition probability are in the range of 10�10 to 10�9
in the H region. Furthermore, one can see that the area under the C–B line in the H region is not a
superposition with the fc constant curves. Namely, the c-BN nucleation would be hardly expected in
the area under the C–B line in the H region based on the deductions above. These results imply that the
experimental synthesis of c-BN in the H region seems impossible. Accordingly, the reasonable phase
region of the c-BN nucleation upon the HPHT supercritical-fluid systems should be the C region rather
than the H region.
On the other hand, the dependence of the probability on the external pressure without taking into
account the nanosize-induced additional pressure is shown in Fig. 27, when the temperatures are in the
range of 1300–1500 K [43]. Actually, one can see that, under the condition of the pressure below
3.5 GPa, the probability of the phase transformation is close to zero in the temperatures range from
1300 to 1500 K. Additionally, we can see that the threshold pressure is 3.5–4.0 GPa in the
temperatures range from 1300 to 1500 K. Distinctly, the result is incompatible with Solozhenko
et al.’s experimental data [317]. However, it is in excellent agreement with the Corrigan–Bundy
C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202 193
Fig. 25. The dependence relationship of the phase transition probability of h-BN to c-BN on the pressure upon HPHTsupercritical-fluids system under certain temperature (T = 1500 K) and the radius of the nucleation (r = 1.6 nm) conditions(after [44]).
Fig. 26. The probability of the phase transition from h-BN to c-BN upon the HPHT supercritical-fluids system without theconsideration of the nanosize-induced interior pressure conditions (i.e., the phase transition probability of the H region inFig. 21) (after [44]).
equilibrium phase diagram. In order to clarify the puzzle, based on the nanothermodynamic nucleation
proposed by us, we obtain the threshold pressure in the temperatures range above again, and
these results are shown in Fig. 28(a and b) [43]. One can see clearly that the threshold pressures
are 2.3–3.0 GPa (r = 2.8 nm) and 2.4–3.0 GPa (r = 3.2 nm), respectively. These results indicate that
the threshold pressure decreases with the size of the critical nuclei of c-BN decreasing. These results
are in excellent agreement with the experimental data [317].
In conclusion, based on the nanothermodynamic analysis, our approach provided a clear physical
and chemical insight into the c-BN nucleation in the supercritical-fluid systems. These theoretical
results indicate that the c-BN nucleation would actually occur in the stable phase region of c-BN in the
boron–nitride phase diagram developed by Corrigan and Bundy.
6. Summary
Thermodynamics of the metastable phases nucleation in the strongly unstable regions of the
metastable structural states in the thermodynamic equilibrium (P, T) phase diagram is reviewed and
194 C.X. Wang, G.W. Yang / Materials Science and Engineering R 49 (2005) 157–202
Fig. 27. The relationship curves of the nucleation probability of c-BN vs. the pressure in the given temperatures withouttaking into account the nanosize-induced interior pressure conditions (after [43]).
Fig. 28. The relationship curves of the nucleation probability of c-BN vs. the pressure in the given temperatures under takinginto account the nanosize-induced interior pressure conditions: (a) the size of the critical nuclei is 2.8 nm and (b) the size is3.2 nm (after [43]).
assessed. It is well known that the beginning of the nucleation reactions involves the nanometer scale;
thus, it is important to consider the hierarchy of the phase stability and the operation of the kinetic
limitations at the nanometer size. With regard to the relative thermodynamic stability, the well-known
Laplace–Young formula (simple capillary theory) provides a building block for the comparison. Thus,
the equation indicates the relative increase in the Gibbs free energy, for gas–liquid or liquid–solid
equilibrium, due to a fine size scale. Recently, we developed a quantitative thermodynamic model at
the nanometer scale based on the Laplace–Young formula and the thermodynamic equilibrium phase
diagram to describe the thermodynamic phenomenon of the metastable phase nucleation in the
strongly unstable regions of the metastable structural states. In this approach, free of any adjustable
parameters, the quantitative nanothermodynamic descriptions of MPNUN are attained by the
appropriate extrapolation of the phase equilibrium (P, T) line of the generally accepted thermodynamic
equilibrium phase diagram and the macroscopic thermodynamic data. The established nanothermo-
dynamic theory seems to open up a new avenue to understandMPNUR. However, we point out that the
developed nanothermodynamic approach is universal and not only applicable to MPNUR. Very
recently, we have extended the nanothermodynamic theory to address the nucleation of the metastable
phase in the stable region of the metastable structural states in the corresponding thermodynamic
equilibrium phase diagram. For instance, we have elucidated the nucleation of diamond and c-BN
nanocrystals upon the pulsed-laser ablation in liquid (i.e., PLIIR) [318,319], in which the diamond
nucleation takes place in the stable phase region of diamond in the carbon phase diagram. We also
extended the nanothermodynamic approach to study the nucleation and growth of one-dimensional
structures on the basis of the vapor–liquid–solid mechanism (VLS). For example, using the established
nanothermodynamic analysis, we have not only theoretically predicted the thermodynamic and kinetic
size limit of nanowires upon the catalyst assistant CVD [320], but also proposed the nucleation
thermodynamic criteria and diffusion kinetic criteria for the issue of catalyst nanoparticles on
nanowires tip or substrate [321]. Therefore, these new achievements of the nanothermodynamic
theory definitely indicate that the theoretical tool could be expected to be a universal approach to
elucidate the nucleation and growth of materials at the nanometer size.
Acknowledgments
The National Science Foundation of China under Grants Nos. 50072022, 90306006, and
10474140, the Distinguished Creative Group Project of the National Natural Science Foundation
of China, and the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong province under Grant No. 036596
supported this work. The authors are grateful to Dr. J.B. Wang, Dr. Q.X. Liu, and Dr. C.Y. Zhang, who
ever worked in G.W. Yang’s group and made the important contributions to the research field covered
by this review. Additionally, the authors are greatly grateful to Professor N.S. Xu for the strong support
and stimulation discussions.
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