66 research outputs found

    Growing Perfect Decagonal Quasicrystals by Local Rules

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    A local growth algorithm for a decagonal quasicrystal is presented. We show that a perfect Penrose tiling (PPT) layer can be grown on a decapod tiling layer by a three dimensional (3D) local rule growth. Once a PPT layer begins to form on the upper layer, successive 2D PPT layers can be added on top resulting in a perfect decagonal quasicrystalline structure in bulk with a point defect only on the bottom surface layer. Our growth rule shows that an ideal quasicrystal structure can be constructed by a local growth algorithm in 3D, contrary to the necessity of non-local information for a 2D PPT growth.Comment: 4pages, 2figure

    Finite-lattice expansion for Ising models on quasiperiodic tilings

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    Low-temperature series are calculated for the free energy, magnetisation, susceptibility and field-derivatives of the susceptibility in the Ising model on the quasiperiodic Penrose lattice. The series are computed to order 20 and estimates of the critical exponents alpha, beta and gamma are obtained from Pade approximants.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX, 26 postscript figure

    Soap Froths and Crystal Structures

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    We propose a physical mechanism to explain the crystal symmetries found in macromolecular and supramolecular micellar materials. We argue that the packing entropy of the hard micellar cores is frustrated by the entropic interaction of their brush-like coronas. The latter interaction is treated as a surface effect between neighboring Voronoi cells. The observed crystal structures correspond to the Kelvin and Weaire-Phelan minimal foams. We show that these structures are stable for reasonable areal entropy densities.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX, 2 included eps figure

    Three-dimensional random Voronoi tessellations: From cubic crystal lattices to Poisson point processes

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    We perturb the SC, BCC, and FCC crystal structures with a spatial Gaussian noise whose adimensional strength is controlled by the parameter a, and analyze the topological and metrical properties of the resulting Voronoi Tessellations (VT). The topological properties of the VT of the SC and FCC crystals are unstable with respect to the introduction of noise, because the corresponding polyhedra are geometrically degenerate, whereas the tessellation of the BCC crystal is topologically stable even against noise of small but finite intensity. For weak noise, the mean area of the perturbed BCC and FCC crystals VT increases quadratically with a. In the case of perturbed SCC crystals, there is an optimal amount of noise that minimizes the mean area of the cells. Already for a moderate noise (a>0.5), the properties of the three perturbed VT are indistinguishable, and for intense noise (a>2), results converge to the Poisson-VT limit. Notably, 2-parameter gamma distributions are an excellent model for the empirical of of all considered properties. The VT of the perturbed BCC and FCC structures are local maxima for the isoperimetric quotient, which measures the degre of sphericity of the cells, among space filling VT. In the BCC case, this suggests a weaker form of the recentluy disproved Kelvin conjecture. Due to the fluctuations of the shape of the cells, anomalous scalings with exponents >3/2 is observed between the area and the volumes of the cells, and, except for the FCC case, also for a->0. In the Poisson-VT limit, the exponent is about 1.67. As the number of faces is positively correlated with the sphericity of the cells, the anomalous scaling is heavily reduced when we perform powerlaw fits separately on cells with a specific number of faces

    Complex crystal structures formed by the self assembly of di-tethered nanospheres

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    We report the results from a computational study of the self-assembly of amphiphilic di-tethered nanospheres using molecular simulation. As a function of the interaction strength and directionality of the tether-tether interactions, we predict the formation of four highly ordered phases not previously reported for nanoparticle systems. We find a double diamond structure comprised of a zincblende (binary diamond) arrangement of spherical micelles with a complementary diamond network of nanoparticles (ZnS/D); a phase of alternating spherical micelles in a NaCl structure with a complementary simple cubic network of nanoparticles to form an overall crystal structure identical to that of AlCu_2Mn (NaCl/SC); an alternating tetragonal ordered cylinder phase with a tetragonal mesh of nanoparticles described by the [8,8,4] Archimedean tiling (TC/T); and an alternating diamond phase in which both diamond networks are formed by the tethers (AD) within a nanoparticle matrix. We compare these structures with those observed in linear and star triblock copolymer systems

    Q-Dependent Susceptibility in Z-Invariant Pentagrid Ising Model

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    We study the q-dependent susceptibility chi(q) of a Z-invariant ferromagnetic Ising model on a Penrose tiling, as first introduced by Korepin using de Bruijn's pentagrid for the rapidity lines. The pair-correlation function for this model can be calculated exactly using the quadratic difference equations from our previous papers. Its Fourier transform chi(q) is studied using a novel way to calculate the joint probability for the pentagrid neighborhoods of the two spins, reducing this calculation to linear programming. Since the lattice is quasiperiodic, we find that chi(q) is aperiodic and has everywhere dense peaks, which are not all visible at very low or high temperatures. More and more peaks become visible as the correlation length increases--that is, as the temperature approaches the critical temperature.Comment: LaTeX2e, 52 pages, 12 figures (45 eps files), uses rotating.sty (choose right rotdriver). v2: Quality of figures has been much enhanced. v3: Misprints correcte

    Studying Amphiphilic Self-assembly with Soft Coarse-Grained Models

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