4.7 Article

Extension of Kirkwood-Buff theory to solids and its application to the compressibility of fcc argon

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 154, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0049673

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [19K05383]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K05383] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The article discusses the application of Kirkwood-Buff integrals to solids by introducing a finite volume method to prevent divergence. It demonstrates that this method can accurately calculate thermodynamic properties of solids, with successful application to solid argon.
In fluids, the compressibility and related thermodynamic properties can be obtained from Kirkwood-Buff integrals (KBIs), i.e., infinite volume integrals over the radial distribution function (RDF). KBI theory has never been applied to crystals because the KBIs diverge when computed in the standard way as running integrals. Here, we show that KBI theory can be applied to solids without divergence, provided that the recently developed finite volume KBI method is used. In order to accelerate the integral convergence as a function of system size, we introduce a physically motivated convolution of the RDF. When using the convoluted RDF and an extrapolation of the finite-volume KBI, the zero-temperature KBI converges very fast to the exact value. We apply the theory to solid argon at finite temperatures. The RDF is computed with a Lennard-Jones potential using Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics simulations, and the isothermal compressibility kappa(T) is obtained from the KBI. The variation of kappa(T) with temperature agrees very well with experiment. The absolute value of kappa(T) is, however, underestimated by 40%-50%, which is attributed to finite size effects of the RDF obtained from molecular simulation. The error can be corrected by a single scaling factor that can be easily calculated at zero temperature. By extending Kirkwood-Buff solution theory to solids, this work lays a new framework for the thermodynamic modeling of complex structures, alloys, and solid solutions.

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