Thermophoresis

Thermophoresis (also thermomigration, thermodiffusion, the Soret effect, or the Ludwig–Soret effect) is a phenomenon observed in mixtures of mobile particles where the different particle types exhibit different responses to the force of a temperature gradient. This phenomenon tends to move light molecules to hot regions and heavy molecules to cold regions. The term thermophoresis most often applies to aerosol mixtures whose mean free path is comparable to its characteristic length scale ,[1] but may also commonly refer to the phenomenon in all phases of matter. The term Soret effect normally applies to liquid mixtures, which behave according to different, less well-understood mechanisms than gaseous mixtures. Thermophoresis may not apply to thermomigration in solids, especially multi-phase alloys.[citation needed]

  1. ^ Talbot L, Cheng RK, Schefer RW, Willis DR (1980). "Thermophoresis of particles in a heated boundary layer" (PDF). J. Fluid Mech. 101 (4): 737–758. Bibcode:1980JFM...101..737T. doi:10.1017/S0022112080001905.

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