126 research outputs found
Computing the Absolute Gibbs Free Energy in Atomistic Simulations: Applications to Defects in Solids
The Gibbs free energy is the fundamental thermodynamic potential underlying
the relative stability of different states of matter under constant-pressure
conditions. However, computing this quantity from atomic-scale simulations is
far from trivial. As a consequence, all too often the potential energy of the
system is used as a proxy, overlooking entropic and anharmonic effects. Here we
discuss a combination of different thermodynamic integration routes to obtain
the absolute Gibbs free energy of a solid system starting from a harmonic
reference state. This approach enables the direct comparison between the free
energy of different structures, circumventing the need to sample the transition
paths between them. We showcase this thermodynamic integration scheme by
computing the Gibbs free energy associated with a vacancy in BCC iron, and the
intrinsic stacking fault free energy of nickel. These examples highlight the
pitfalls of estimating the free energy of crystallographic defects only using
the minimum potential energy, which overestimates the vacancy free energy by
60% and the stacking-fault energy by almost 300% at temperatures close to the
melting point
Theoretical prediction of the homogeneous ice nucleation rate: disentangling thermodynamics and kinetics
Estimating the homogeneous ice nucleation rate from undercooled liquid water
is at the same time crucial for understanding many important physical phenomena
and technological applications, and challenging for both experiments and
theory. From a theoretical point of view, difficulties arise due to the long
time scales required, as well as the numerous nucleation pathways involved to
form ice nuclei with different stacking disorders. We computed the homogeneous
ice nucleation rate at a physically relevant undercooling for a single-site
water model, taking into account the diffuse nature of ice-water interfaces,
stacking disorders in ice nuclei, and the addition rate of particles to the
critical nucleus.We disentangled and investigated the relative importance of
all the terms, including interfacial free energy, entropic contributions and
the kinetic prefactor, that contribute to the overall nucleation rate.There has
been a long-standing discrepancy for the predicted homogeneous ice nucleation
rates, and our estimate is faster by 9 orders of magnitude compared with
previous literature values. Breaking down the problem into segments and
considering each term carefully can help us understand where the discrepancy
may come from and how to systematically improve the existing computational
methods
Direct path integral estimators for isotope fractionation ratios
Fractionation of isotopes among distinct molecules or phases is a quantum
effect which is often exploited to obtain insights on reaction mechanisms,
biochemical, geochemical and atmospheric phenomena. Accurate evaluation of
isotope ratios in atomistic simulations is challenging, because one needs to
perform a thermodynamic integration with respect to the isotope mass, along
with time-consuming path integral calculations. By re-formulating the problem
as a particle exchange in the ring polymer partition function, we derive new
estimators giving direct access to the differential partitioning of isotopes,
which can simplify the calculations by avoiding thermodynamic integration. We
demonstrate the efficiency of these estimators by applying them to investigate
the isotope fractionation ratios in the gas-phase Zundel cation, and in a few
simple hydrocarbons.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Computing the Tolman length for solid-liquid interfaces
The curvature dependence of interfacial free energy, which is crucial in
quantitatively predicting nucleation kinetics and the stability of bubbles and
droplets, can be described in terms of the Tolman length {\delta}. For
solid-liquid interfaces, however,{\delta} has never been computed directly due
to various theoretical and practical challenges. Here we present a general
method that enables the direct evaluation of the Tolman length from atomistic
simulations of a solid-liquid planar interface in out-of-equilibrium
conditions. This method works by first measuring the surface tension from the
amplitude of thermal capillary fluctuations of a localized version of Gibbs
dividing surface, and bythen computing the free energy difference between the
surface of tension and the equimolar dividing surface. For benchmark purposes,
we computed {\delta}for a model potential, and compared the results to less
rigorous indirect approaches
The Gibbs free energy of homogeneous nucleation: from atomistic nuclei to the planar limit
In this paper we discuss how the information contained in atomistic
simulations of homogeneous nucleation should be used when fitting the
parameters in macroscopic nucleation models. We show how the number of solid
and liquid atoms in such simulations can be determined unambiguously by using a
Gibbs dividing surface and how the free energy as a function of the number of
solid atoms in the nucleus can thus be extracted. We then show that the
parameters of a model based on classical nucleation theory can be fit using the
information contained in these free-energy profiles but that the parameters in
such models are highly correlated. This correlation is unfortunate as it
ensures that small errors in the computed free energy surface can give rise to
large errors in the extrapolated properties of the fitted model. To resolve
this problem we thus propose a method for fitting macroscopic nucleation models
that uses simulations of planar interfaces and simulations of three-dimensional
nuclei in tandem. We show that when the parameters of the macroscopic model are
fitted in this way the numerical errors for the final fitted model are smaller
and that the extrapolated predictions for large nuclei are thus more reliable
Hydrogen Diffusion and Trapping in {\alpha}-Iron: The Role of Quantum and Anharmonic Fluctuations
We investigate the thermodynamics and kinetics of a hydrogen interstitial in
magnetic {\alpha}-iron, taking account of the quantum fluctuations of the
proton as well as the anharmonicities of lattice vibrations and hydrogen
hopping. We show that the diffusivity of hydrogen in the lattice of BCC iron
deviates strongly from an Arrhenius behavior at and below room temperature. We
compare a quantum transition state theory to explicit ring polymer molecular
dynamics in the calculation of diffusivity and we find that the role of phonons
is to inhibit, not to enhance, diffusivity at intermediate temperatures in
constrast to the usual polaron picture of hopping. We then address the trapping
of hydrogen by a vacancy as a prototype lattice defect. By a sequence of steps
in a thought experiment, each involving a thermodynamic integration, we are
able to separate out the binding free energy of a proton to a defect into
harmonic and anharmonic, and classical and quantum contributions. We find that
about 30% of a typical binding free energy of hydrogen to a lattice defect in
iron is accounted for by finite temperature effects and about half of these
arise from quantum proton fluctuations. This has huge implications for the
comparison between thermal desorption and permeation experiments and standard
electronic structure theory. The implications are even greater for the
interpretation of muon spin resonance experiments
A streamlined molecular-dynamics workflow for computing solubilities of molecular and ionic crystals
Computing the solubility of crystals in a solvent using atomistic simulations
is notoriously challenging due to the complexities and convergence issues
associated with free-energy methods, as well as the slow equilibration in
direct-coexistence simulations. This paper introduces a molecular-dynamics
workflow that simplifies and robustly computes the solubility of molecular or
ionic crystals. This method is considerably more straightforward than the
state-of-the-art, as we have streamlined and optimised each step of the
process. Specifically, we calculate the chemical potential of the crystal using
the gas-phase molecule as a reference state, and employ the S0 method to
determine the concentration dependence of the chemical potential of the solute.
We use this workflow to predict the solubilities of sodium chloride in water,
urea polymorphs in water, and paracetamol polymorphs in both water and ethanol.
Our findings indicate that the predicted solubility is sensitive to the chosen
potential energy surface. Furthermore, we note that the harmonic approximation
often fails for both molecular crystals and gas molecules at or above room
temperature, and that the assumption of an ideal solution becomes less valid
for highly soluble substances
Bridging the gap between atomistic and macroscopic models of homogeneous nucleation
Macroscopic theories of nucleation such as classical nucleation theory envision that clusters of the bulk stable phase form inside the bulk metastable phase. Molecular dynamics simulations are often used to elucidate nucleation mechanisms, by capturing the microscopic configurations of all the atoms. In this paper, we introduce a thermodynamic model that links macroscopic theories and atomicscale simulations and thus provide a simple and elegant framework for testing the limits of classical nucleation theory. Published by AIP Publishing
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