42 research outputs found
Shortcomings of the Bond Orientational Order Parameters for the Analysis of Disordered Particulate Matter
Local structure characterization with the bond-orientational order parameters
q4, q6, ... introduced by Steinhardt et al. has become a standard tool in
condensed matter physics, with applications including glass, jamming, melting
or crystallization transitions and cluster formation. Here we discuss two
fundamental flaws in the definition of these parameters that significantly
affect their interpretation for studies of disordered systems, and offer a
remedy. First, the definition of the bond-orientational order parameters
considers the geometrical arrangement of a set of neighboring spheres NN(p)
around a given central particle p; we show that procedure to select the spheres
constituting the neighborhood NN(p) can have greater influence on both the
numerical values and qualitative trend of ql than a change of the physical
parameters, such as packing fraction. Second, the discrete nature of
neighborhood implies that NN(p) is not a continuous function of the particle
coordinates; this discontinuity, inherited by ql, leads to a lack of robustness
of the ql as structure metrics. Both issues can be avoided by a morphometric
approach leading to the robust Minkowski structure metrics ql'. These ql' are
of a similar mathematical form as the conventional bond-orientational order
parameters and are mathematically equivalent to the recently introduced
Minkowski tensors [Europhys. Lett. 90, 34001 (2010); Phys. Rev. E. 85, 030301
(2012)]
Liquid-solid transitions in the three-body hard-core model
We determine the phase diagram for a generalisation of two-and
three-dimensional hard spheres: a classical system with three-body interactions
realised as a hard cut-off on the mean-square distance for each triplet of
particles. Quantum versions of this model are important in the context of the
unitary Bose gas, which is currently under close theoretical and experimental
scrutiny. In two dimensions, the three-body hard-core model possesses a
conventional atomic liquid phase and a peculiar solid phase formed by dimers.
These dimers interact effectively as hard disks. In three dimensions, the solid
phase consists of isolated atoms that arrange in a simple-hexagonal lattice.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures; reorganized introduction, expanded 3D sectio
Thermodynamic phases in two-dimensional active matter
Active matter has been intensely studied for its wealth of intriguing
properties such as collective motion, motility-induced phase separation (MIPS),
and giant fluctuations away from criticality. However, the precise connection
of active materials with their equilibrium counterparts has remained unclear.
For two-dimensional (2D) systems, this is also because the experimental and
theoretical understanding of the liquid, hexatic, and solid equilibrium phases
and their phase transitions is very recent. Here, we use self-propelled
particles with inverse-power-law repulsions (but without alignment
interactions) as a minimal model for 2D active materials. A kinetic Monte Carlo
(MC) algorithm allows us to map out the complete quantitative phase diagram. We
demonstrate that the active system preserves all equilibrium phases, and that
phase transitions are shifted to higher densities as a function of activity.
The two-step melting scenario is maintained. At high activity, a critical point
opens up a gas-liquid MIPS region. We expect that the independent appearance of
two-step melting and of MIPS is generic for a large class of two-dimensional
active systems.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
A kinetic-Monte Carlo perspective on active matter
We study non-equilibrium phases for interacting two-dimensional
self-propelled particles with isotropic pair-wise interactions using a
persistent kinetic Monte Carlo (MC) approach. We establish the quantitative
phase diagram, including the motility-induced phase separation (MIPS) that is a
commonly observed collective phenomena in active matter. In addition, we
demonstrate for several different potential forms the presence of two-step
melting, with an intermediate hexatic phase, in regions far from equilibrium.
Increased activity can melt a two-dimensional solid and the melting lines
remain disjoint from MIPS. We establish this phase diagram for a range of the
inter-particle potential stiffnesses, and identify the MIPS phase even in the
hard-disk limit. We establish that the full description of the phase behavior
requires three independent control parameters.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure