Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review

Elucidating the underlying mechanisms of molecular solidification in both homo- and hetero-geneous systems is of paramount importance for a large swathe of natural phenomena (whether on Earth or throughout the Universe), as well as a whole litany of industrial processes. One lesser-studied aspect of...

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Main Author: Niall J. English
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-03-01
Series:Crystals
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/11/3/316
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spelling doaj-ac9e234769f94aca9f6840ddc1923d602021-03-23T00:07:17ZengMDPI AGCrystals2073-43522021-03-011131631610.3390/cryst11030316Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A ReviewNiall J. English0School of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, IrelandElucidating the underlying mechanisms of molecular solidification in both homo- and hetero-geneous systems is of paramount importance for a large swathe of natural phenomena (whether on Earth or throughout the Universe), as well as a whole litany of industrial processes. One lesser-studied aspect of these disorder-order transitions is the effect of external applied fields, shifting both thermodynamic driving forces and underlying kinetics, and, indeed, fundamental mechanisms themselves. Perhaps this is nowhere more apparent than in the case of externally-applied electric fields, where there has been a gradually increasing number of reports in recent years of electro-manipulated crystallisation imparted by such electric fields. Drawing motivations from both natural phenomena, state-of-the-art experiments and, indeed, industrial applications, this review focusses on how non-equilibrium molecular simulation has helped to elucidate crystallisation phenomena from a microscopic perspective, as well as offering an important, predictive molecular-design approach with which to further refine in-field-crystallisation operations.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/11/3/316molecular simulationcrystallizationelectric fields
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Niall J. English
spellingShingle Niall J. English
Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
Crystals
molecular simulation
crystallization
electric fields
author_facet Niall J. English
author_sort Niall J. English
title Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
title_short Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
title_full Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
title_fullStr Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
title_full_unstemmed Molecular Simulation of Crystallisation in External Electric Fields: A Review
title_sort molecular simulation of crystallisation in external electric fields: a review
publisher MDPI AG
series Crystals
issn 2073-4352
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Elucidating the underlying mechanisms of molecular solidification in both homo- and hetero-geneous systems is of paramount importance for a large swathe of natural phenomena (whether on Earth or throughout the Universe), as well as a whole litany of industrial processes. One lesser-studied aspect of these disorder-order transitions is the effect of external applied fields, shifting both thermodynamic driving forces and underlying kinetics, and, indeed, fundamental mechanisms themselves. Perhaps this is nowhere more apparent than in the case of externally-applied electric fields, where there has been a gradually increasing number of reports in recent years of electro-manipulated crystallisation imparted by such electric fields. Drawing motivations from both natural phenomena, state-of-the-art experiments and, indeed, industrial applications, this review focusses on how non-equilibrium molecular simulation has helped to elucidate crystallisation phenomena from a microscopic perspective, as well as offering an important, predictive molecular-design approach with which to further refine in-field-crystallisation operations.
topic molecular simulation
crystallization
electric fields
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4352/11/3/316
work_keys_str_mv AT nialljenglish molecularsimulationofcrystallisationinexternalelectricfieldsareview
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