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Generalization of the Kelvin Equation for Arbitrarily Curved Surfaces

Published 22 Jul 2019 in physics.chem-ph, cond-mat.soft, and physics.flu-dyn | (1907.09229v1)

Abstract: Capillary condensation, which takes place in confined geometries, is the first-order vapor-to-liquid phase transition and is explained by the Kelvin equation, but the equations applicability for arbitrarily curved surface has been long debated and is a sever problem. Recently, we have proposed generic dynamic equations for moving surfaces. Application of the equations to static shapes and modelling the pressure at the interface nearly trivially solves the generalization problem for the Kelvin equation. The equations are universally true for any surfaces: atomic, molecular, micro or macro scale, real or virtual, Riemannian or pseudo-Riemannian, active or passive.

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