Superheating: Difference between revisions
		
		
		
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'''Superheating''' refers to heating a solid to [[temperature]]s above its thermodynamic melting point.  | '''Superheating''' refers to heating a solid to [[temperature]]s above its thermodynamic melting point, or a liquid to temperatures above its boiling point.  | ||
==References==  | ==References==  | ||
<references/>  | <references/>  | ||
Revision as of 11:49, 11 July 2011
Superheating refers to heating a solid to temperatures above its thermodynamic melting point, or a liquid to temperatures above its boiling point.
References
- Related reading
 
- G. E. Norman; V. V. Stegailov "Simulation of Ideal Crystal Superheating and Decay", Molecular Simulation 30 pp. 397-406 (2004)
 - Carl McBride, Carlos Vega, Eduardo Sanz, Luis G. MacDowell and José L. F. Abascal "The range of meta stability of ice-water melting for two simple models of water", Molecular Physics 103 pp. 1-5 (2005)
 - Xian-Ming Bai and Mo Li "Differences between solid superheating and liquid supercooling", Journal of Chemical Physics 123 151102 (2005)
 - A. B. Belonoshko, N. V. Skorodumova, A. Rosengren, and B. Johansson "Melting and critical superheating", Physical Review B 73 012201 (2006)
 - D. Alfè, C. Cazorla, and M. J. Gillan "The kinetics of homogeneous melting beyond the limit of superheating", Journal of Chemical Physics 135 024102 (2011)