4.3 Article

Mesoscopic and macroscopic dipole clusters: Structure and phase transitions

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL D
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 251-264

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10053-000-8808-y

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A two dimensional (2D) classical system of dipole particles confined by a quadratic potential is studied. This system can be used as a model for rare electrons in semiconductor structures near a metal electrode, indirect excitons in coupled quantum dots etc. For clusters of N less than or equal to 80 particles ground state configurations and appropriate eigenfrequencies and eigenvectors for the normal modes are found. Monte-Carlo and molecular dynamic methods are used to study the order-disorder transition (the melting of clusters). In mesoscopic clusters (N < 37) there is a hierarchy of transitions: at lower temperatures an intershell orientational disordering of pairs of shells takes place; at higher temperatures the intershell diffusion sets in and the shell structure disappears. In macroscopic clusters (N > 37) an orientational melting of only the outer shell is possible. The most stable clusters (having both maximal lowest nonzero eigenfrequencies and maximal temperatures of total melting) are those of completed crystal shells which are concentric groups of nodes of 2D hexagonal lattice with a number of nodes placed in the center of them. The picture of disordering in clusters is compared with that in an infinite 2D dipole system. The study of the radial diffusion constant, the structure factor, the local minima distribution and other quantities shows that the melting temperature is a nonmonotonic function of the number of particles in the system. The dynamical equilibrium between solid-like and orientationally disordered forms of clusters is considered.

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