- Series
- CDSNS Colloquium
- Time
- Monday, October 25, 2010 - 11:00am for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
- Location
- Skiles 114
- Speaker
- Shouhong Wang – Indiana University
- Organizer
- Chongchun Zeng
Gas-liquid transition is one of the most basic problem to study in
equilibrium phase transitions. In the pressure-temperature phase
diagram, the gas-liquid coexistence curve terminates at a critical point
C, also called the Andrews critical point. It is, however, still an
open question why the Andrews critical point exists and what is the
order of transition going beyond this critical point. To answer this
basic question, using the Landau's mean field theory and the Le
Chatelier principle, a dynamic model for the gas-liquid phase
transitions is established. With this dynamic model, we are able to
derive a theory on the Andrews critical point C: 1) the critical point
is a switching point where the phase transition changes from the first
order with latent heat to the third order, and 2) the liquid-gas phase
transition going beyond Andrews point is of the third order. This
clearly explains why it is hard to observe the liquid-gas phase
transition going beyond the Andrews point. In addition, the study
suggest an asymmetry principle of fluctuations, which appears also in
phase transitions in ferromagnetic systems.
The analysis is based on the dynamic transition theory we have developed
recently with the philosophy to search the complete set of transition
states. The theory has been applied to a wide range of nonlinear
problems. A brief introduction for this theory will be presented as
well. This is joint with Tian Ma.