4.7 Article

Low-temperature statistical mechanics of the Quantizer problem: Fast quenching and equilibrium cooling of the three-dimensional Voronoi liquid

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 153, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/5.0029301

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Princeton University Innovation Fund for New Ideas in the Natural Sciences
  2. Australian Government
  3. Government of Western Australia
  4. LUNRAC at Lund, Sweden

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The quantizer problem is a tessellation optimization problem where point configurations are identified such that the Voronoi cells minimize the second moment of the volume distribution. While the ground state (optimal state) in 3D is almost certainly the body-centered cubic lattice, disordered and effectively hyperuniform states with energies very close to the ground state exist that result as stable states in an evolution through the geometric Lloyd's algorithm [M. A. Klatt et al. Nat. Commun. 10, 811 (2019)]. When considered as a statistical mechanics problem at finite temperature, the same system has been termed the Voronoi liquid by Ruscher, Baschnagel, and Farago [Europhys. Lett. 112, 66003 (2015)]. Here, we investigate the cooling behavior of the Voronoi liquid with a particular view to the stability of the effectively hyperuniform disordered state. As a confirmation of the results by Ruscher et al., we observe, by both molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations, that upon slow quasi-static equilibrium cooling, the Voronoi liquid crystallizes from a disordered configuration into the body-centered cubic configuration. By contrast, upon sufficiently fast non-equilibrium cooling (and not just in the limit of a maximally fast quench), the Voronoi liquid adopts similar states as the effectively hyperuniform inherent structures identified by Klatt et al. and prevents the ordering transition into a body-centered cubic ordered structure. This result is in line with the geometric intuition that the geometric Lloyd's algorithm corresponds to a type of fast quench.

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