Vibrational theory for monatomic liquids
The construction of the vibration-transit theory of liquid dynamics is being presented in three sequential research reports. The first is on the entire condensed-matter collection of N-atom potential energy valleys and identification of the random valleys as the liquid domain. The present (second) r...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physical review. B 2019-03, Vol.99 (10), p.104204, Article 104204 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The construction of the vibration-transit theory of liquid dynamics is being presented in three sequential research reports. The first is on the entire condensed-matter collection of N-atom potential energy valleys and identification of the random valleys as the liquid domain. The present (second) report defines the vibrational Hamiltonian and describes its application to statistical mechanics. The following is a brief list of the major topics treated here. The vibrational Hamiltonian is universal, in that its potential energy is a single 3N-dimensional harmonic valley. The anharmonic contribution is also treated. The Hamiltonian is calibrated from first-principles calculations of the structural potential and the vibrational frequencies and eigenvectors. Exact quantum-statistical-mechanical functions are expressed in universal equations and are evaluated exactly from vibrational data. Exact classical-statistical-mechanical functions are also expressed in universal equations and are evaluated exactly from a few moments of the vibrational frequency distribution. The complete condensed-matter distributions of these moments are graphically displayed, and their use in statistical mechanics is clarified. The third report will present transit theory, which treats the motion of atoms between the N-atom potential energy valleys. |
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ISSN: | 2469-9950 2469-9969 |
DOI: | 10.1103/PhysRevB.99.104204 |