18 research outputs found
Coalescence of nanoscale metal clusters: Molecular-dynamics study
We study the coalescence of nanoscale metal clusters in an inert-gas
atmosphere using constant-energy molecular dynamics. The coalescence proceeds
via atomic diffusion with the release of surface energy raising the
temperature. If the temperature exceeds the melting point of the coalesced
cluster, a molten droplet forms. If the temperature falls between the melting
point of the larger cluster and those of the smaller clusters, a metastable
molten droplet forms and freezes.Comment: 5 figure
Follicle-stimulating-hormone receptor and twinning [3] (multiple letters)
Lancet3579251230-232LANC
Surface self-diffusion of a Pt adatom on cuboctahedral and truncated decahedral clusters, size dependence
The self-diffusion of single Pt adatom on the surface of cuboctahedral and truncated decahedral clusters with 561–10 179 atoms are studied
within the context of the many-body potentials obtained via the embedded atom method. The minimum energy diffusion path and the corresponding
energy barrier for adatom diffusion on the cuboctahedral and truncated decahedral clusters surfaces are determined through a combination of the
quenched molecular dynamics and the nudged elastic band method. The calculated energy barriers are consistent with the available experimental
data. The dependence of energy barrier for adatom diffusion across the step edge on the cluster size is found. For the larger cuboctahedral and
truncated decahedral clusters, the simulations show that the movement of the adatom is confined to a central region, and the adatom may escape
from the center region only at elevated temperatures. In addition, we also find that the truncated decahedral structure is more favorable over
the cuboctahedral structure for smaller clusters. The cluster growth experiments support our results