406 research outputs found
Equilibrium phase behavior of polydisperse hard spheres
We calculate the phase behavior of hard spheres with size polydispersity,
using accurate free energy expressions for the fluid and solid phases. Cloud
and shadow curves, which determine the onset of phase coexistence, are found
exactly by the moment free energy method, but we also compute the complete
phase diagram, taking full account of fractionation effects. In contrast to
earlier, simplified treatments we find no point of equal concentration between
fluid and solid or re-entrant melting at higher densities. Rather, the fluid
cloud curve continues to the largest polydispersity that we study (14%); from
the equilibrium phase behavior a terminal polydispersity can thus only be
defined for the solid, where we find it to be around 7%. At sufficiently large
polydispersity, fractionation into several solid phases can occur, consistent
with previous approximate calculations; we find in addition that coexistence of
several solids with a fluid phase is also possible
Formation of helical ion chains
We study the nonequilibrium dynamics of the linear to zigzag structural phase
transition exhibited by an ion chain confined in a trap with periodic boundary
conditions. The transition is driven by reducing the transverse confinement at
a finite quench rate, which can be accurately controlled. This results in the
formation of zigzag domains oriented along different transverse planes. The
twists between different domains can be stabilized by the topology of the trap
and under laser cooling the system has a chance to relax to a helical chain
with nonzero winding number. Molecular dynamics simulations are used to obtain
a large sample of possible trajectories for different quench rates. The scaling
of the average winding number with different quench rates is compared to the
prediction of the Kibble-Zurek theory, and a good quantitative agreement is
found
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