A simple and accurate method to determine fluid-crystal phase boundaries from direct coexistence simulations

Publication date

2024-06-14

Authors

Smallenburg, FrankISNI 0000000395977772
Del Monte, Giovanni
de Jager, MarjoleinISNI 0000000506363133
Filion, LauraISNI 0000000387851600

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

One method for computationally determining phase boundaries is to explicitly simulate a direct coexistence between the two phases of interest. Although this approach works very well for fluid-fluid coexistences, it is often considered to be less useful for fluid-crystal transitions, as additional care must be taken to prevent the simulation boundaries from imposing unwanted strains on the crystal phase. Here, we present a simple adaptation to the direct coexistence method that nonetheless allows us to obtain highly accurate predictions of fluid-crystal coexistence conditions, assuming that a fluid-crystal interface can be readily simulated. We test our approach on hard spheres, the screened Coulomb potential, and a 2D patchy-particle model. In all cases, we find excellent agreement between the direct coexistence approach and (much more cumbersome) free-energy calculation methods. Moreover, the method is sufficiently accurate to resolve the (tiny) free-energy difference between the face-centered cubic and hexagonally close-packed crystal of hard spheres in the thermodynamic limit. The simplicity of this method also ensures that it can be trivially implemented in essentially any simulation method or package. Hence, this approach provides an excellent alternative to free-energy based methods for the precise determination of phase boundaries.

Keywords

Taverne, General Physics and Astronomy, Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

Citation

Smallenburg, F, Del Monte, G, de Jager, M & Filion, L 2024, 'A simple and accurate method to determine fluid-crystal phase boundaries from direct coexistence simulations', Journal of Chemical Physics, vol. 160, no. 22, 224109. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0213535