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From canyons to valleys: Numerically continuing sticky hard sphere clusters to the landscapes of smoother potentials

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 Added by Anthony Trubiano
 Publication date 2019
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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We study the energy landscapes of particles with short-range attractive interactions as the range of the interactions increases. Starting with the set of local minima for $6leq Nleq12$ hard spheres that are sticky, i.e. they interact only when their surfaces are exactly in contact, we use numerical continuation to evolve the local minima (clusters) as the range of the potential increases, using both the Lennard-Jones and Morse families of interaction potentials. As the range increases, clusters merge, until at long ranges only one or two clusters are left. We compare clusters obtained by continuation with different potentials and find that for short and medium ranges, up to about 30% of particle diameter, the continued clusters are nearly identical, both within and across families of potentials. For longer ranges the clusters vary significantly, with more variation between families of potentials than within a family. We analyze the mechanisms behind the merge events, and find that most rearrangements occur when a pair of non-bonded particles comes within the range of the potential. An exception occurs for nonharmonic clusters, those that have a zero eigenvalue in their Hessian, which undergo a more global rearrangement.



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A relation $mathcal{M}_{mathrm{SHS}tomathrm{LJ}}$ between the set of non-isomorphic sticky hard sphere clusters $mathcal{M}_mathrm{SHS}$ and the sets of local energy minima $mathcal{M}_{LJ}$ of the $(m,n)$-Lennard-Jones potential $V^mathrm{LJ}_{mn}(r) = frac{varepsilon}{n-m} [ m r^{-n} - n r^{-m} ]$ is established. The number of nonisomorphic stable clusters depends strongly and nontrivially on both $m$ and $n$, and increases exponentially with increasing cluster size $N$ for $N gtrsim 10$. While the map from $mathcal{M}_mathrm{SHS}to mathcal{M}_{mathrm{SHS}tomathrm{LJ}}$ is non-injective and non-surjective, the number of Lennard-Jones structures missing from the map is relatively small for cluster sizes up to $N=13$, and most of the missing structures correspond to energetically unfavourable minima even for fairly low $(m,n)$. Furthermore, even the softest Lennard-Jones potential predicts that the coordination of 13 spheres around a central sphere is problematic (the Gregory-Newton problem). A more realistic extended Lennard-Jones potential chosen from coupled-cluster calculations for a rare gas dimer leads to a substantial increase in the number of nonisomorphic clusters, even though the potential curve is very similar to a (6,12)-Lennard-Jones potential.
The coupling-parameter method, whereby an extra particle is progressively coupled to the rest of the particles, is applied to the sticky-hard-sphere fluid to obtain its equation of state in the so-called chemical-potential route ($mu$ route). As a consistency test, the results for one-dimensional sticky particles are shown to be exact. Results corresponding to the three-dimensional case (Baxters model) are derived within the Percus-Yevick approximation by using different prescriptions for the dependence of the interaction potential of the extra particle on the coupling parameter. The critical point and the coexistence curve of the gas-liquid phase transition are obtained in the $mu$ route and compared with predictions from other thermodynamics routes and from computer simulations. The results show that the $mu$ route yields a general better description than the virial, energy, compressibility, and zero-separation routes.
Sticky hard spheres, i.e., hard particles decorated with a short-ranged attractive interaction potential, constitute a relatively simple model with highly non-trivial glassy dynamics. The mode-coupling theory of the glass transition (MCT) offers a qualitative account of the complex reentrant dynamics of sticky hard spheres, but the predicted glass transition point is notoriously underestimated. Here we apply an improved first-principles-based theory, referred to as generalized mode-coupling theory (GMCT), to sticky hard spheres. This theoretical framework seeks to go beyond MCT by hierarchically expanding the dynamics in higher-order density correlation functions -- an approach that may become exact if sufficiently many correlations are taken into account. We predict the phase diagrams from the first few levels of the GMCT hierarchy and the dynamics-related critical exponents, all of which are much closer to the empirical observations than MCT. Notably, the prominent reentrant glassy dynamics, the glass-glass transition, and the higher-order bifurcation singularity classes ($A_3$ and $A_4$) of sticky hard spheres are found to be preserved within GMCT at arbitrary order. Moreover, we demonstrate that when the hierarchical order of GMCT increases, the effect of the short-ranged attractive interactions becomes more evident in the dynamics. This implies that GMCT is more sensitive to subtle microstructural differences than MCT, and that the framework provides a promising first-principles approach to systematically go beyond the MCT regime.
135 - Mingcheng Yang , Hongru Ma 2008
The solid-solid coexistence of a polydisperse hard sphere system is studied by using the Monte Carlo simulation. The results show that for large enough polydispersity the solid-solid coexistence state is more stable than the single-phase solid. The two coexisting solids have different composition distributions but the same crystal structure. Moreover, there is evidence that the solid-solid transition terminates in a critical point as in the case of the fluid-fluid transition.
An approach to obtain the structural properties of additive binary hard-sphere mixtures is presented. Such an approach, which is a nontrivial generalization of the one recently used for monocomponent hard-sphere fluids [S. Pieprzyk, A. C. Branka, and D. M. Heyes, Phys. Rev. E 95, 062104 (2017)], combines accurate molecular-dynamics simulation data, the pole structure representation of the total correlation functions, and the Ornstein-Zernike equation. A comparison of the direct correlation functions obtained with the present scheme with those derived from theoretical results stemming from the Percus-Yevick (PY) closure and the so-called rational-function approximation (RFA) is performed. The density dependence of the leading poles of the Fourier transforms of the total correlation functions and the decay of the pair correlation functions of the mixtures are also addressed and compared to the predictions of the two theoretical approximations. A very good overall agreement between the results of the present scheme and those of the RFA is found, thus suggesting that the latter (which is an improvement over the PY approximation) can safely be used to predict reasonably well the long-range behavior, including the structural crossover, of the correlation functions of additive binary hard-sphere mixtures.
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