158 research outputs found
Density functional theory calculation and thermodynamic analysis of the bridgmanite surface structure
Bridgmanite, a high temperature and pressure form of , is believed
to be Earth's most abundant mineral and responsible for the observed seismic
anisotropy in the mantle. Little is known about surfaces of bridgmanite but
knowledge of the most stable surface terminations is important for
understanding various geochemical processes as well as likely slip planes. A
density functional theory based thermodynamic approach is used here to
establish the range of stability of bridgmanite as well as possible termination
structures of the (001), (010), (100) and (011) surfaces as a function of the
chemical potential of oxygen and magnesium. The results presented provide a
basis for further theoretical studies of the chemical processes on bridgmanite
surfaces in the Earth's mantle and slip plane analysis.Comment: 4 Pages,4 figure
Fast and Robust Algorithm for the Energy Minimization of Spin Systems Applied in an Analysis of High Temperature Spin Configurations in Terms of Skyrmion Density
An algorithm for the minimization of the energy of magnetic systems is
presented and applied to the analysis of thermal configurations of a
ferromagnet to identify inherent structures, i.e. the nearest local energy
minima, as a function of temperature. Over a rather narrow temperature
interval, skyrmions appear and reach a high temperature limit for the skyrmion
density. In addition, the performance of the algorithm is further demonstrated
in a self-consistent field calculation of a skyrmion in an itinerant magnet.
The algorithm is based on a geometric approach in which the curvature of the
spherical domain is taken into account and as a result the length of the
magnetic moments is preserved in every iteration. In the limit of infinitesimal
rotations, the minimization path coincides with that obtained using damped spin
dynamics while the use of limited-memory quasi-newton minimization algorithms,
such as the limited-memory Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno (LBFGS) algorithm,
significantly accelerates the convergence
Site preference of Fe atoms in the olivine and its surface
Olivine is involved in many natural reactions and industrial reactions as a
catalyst. The catalytic ability is highly possible rely on the in
olivine. We use density functional theory calculation and thermodynamics to
investigate the site preference of Fe atom in olivine which composition from
iron-rich to iron-poor and its surfaces. The always shows its high
spin (quintet) state which has larger ion radius than in olivine
crystal and surfaces. The inside the surface slab prefers the smaller
M1 site than M2 site by enlarge the metal-oxygen octahedra when occupied the
metal site as in the bulk system. Energy contribution of entropies accumulation
caused temperature raise stops this preference at the temperature where a
cation order-disorder distribution energy crossover happen in olivine. Surface
exposed site provide large space due its unsaturated nature. This
lead a higher level of preference of to the surface site than any
metal site inside the crystal no matter M1 or M2 site is exposed. This indicate
the in the bulk system can diffuse to a metal site exposed on the
surface driven by the energy difference. Many reactions can use the on surface
as a catalyst because of the active chemical behavior of Fe.
Meanwhile this energetics preference should be considered in the future model
to explain the natural observed zoning olivine have a high Fe edge and low Fe
center. These microscopic understanding can be essential to many olivine
related geochemical and astrochemical reactions.Comment: 8 figure
Long-timescale simulations of HO admolecule diffusion on Ice Ih(0001) surfaces
Long-timescale simulations of the diffusion of a HO admolecule on the
(0001) basal plane of ice Ih were carried out over a temperature range of 100
to 200 K using the adaptive kinetic Monte Carlo method and TIP4P/2005f
interaction potential function. The arrangement of dangling H atoms was varied
from the proton-disordered surface to the perfectly ordered Fletcher surface. A
large variety of sites was found leading to a broad distribution in adsorption
energy at both types of surfaces. Up to 4 % of the sites on the
proton-disordered surface have an adsorption energy exceeding the cohesive
energy of ice Ih. The mean squared displacement of a simulated trajectory at
175 K for the proton-disordered surface gave a diffusion constant of
610 cm/s, consistent with an upper bound previously reported
from experimental measurements. During the simulation, dangling H atoms were
found to rearrange so as to reduce clustering, thereby approaching a linear
Fletcher type arrangement. Diffusion on the perfectly ordered Fletcher surface
was estimated to be significantly faster, especially in the direction along the
rows of dangling hydrogen atoms. From simulations over the range in
temperature, an effective activation energy of diffusion was estimated to be
0.16 eV and 0.22 eV for diffusion parallel and perpendicular to the rows,
respectively. Even a slight disruption of the rows of the Fletcher surface made
the diffusion isotropic.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures, 1 tabl
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