A systematic search for multicomponent crystal structures is carried out for
five different ternary systems of nuclei in a polarizable background of
electrons, representative of accreted neutron star crusts and some white
dwarfs. Candidate structures are "bred" by a genetic algorithm, and optimized
at constant pressure under the assumption of linear response (Thomas-Fermi)
charge screening. Subsequent phase equilibria calculations reveal eight
distinct crystal structures in the T=0 bulk phase diagrams, five of which are
complicated multinary structures not before predicted in the context of compact
object astrophysics. Frequent instances of geometrically similar but
compositionally distinct phases give insight into structural preferences of
systems with pairwise Yukawa interactions, including and extending to the
regime of low density colloidal suspensions made in a laboratory. As an
application of these main results, we self-consistently couple the phase
stability problem to the equations for a self-gravitating, hydrostatically
stable white dwarf, with fixed overall composition. To our knowledge, this is
the first attempt to incorporate complex multinary phases into the equilibrium
phase layering diagram and mass-radius-composition dependence, both of which
are reported for He-C-O and C-O-Ne white dwarfs. Finite thickness interfacial
phases ("interphases") show up at the boundaries between single-component bcc
crystalline regions, some of which have lower lattice symmetry than cubic. A
second application -- quasi-static settling of heavy nuclei in white dwarfs --
builds on our equilibrium phase layering method. Tests of this nonequilibrium
method reveal extra phases which play the role of transient host phases for the
settling species.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Submitted to Ap