Phys. Rev. B 66, 064104 (2002) [14 pages]Thermodynamic behavior of a model covalent material described by the environment-dependent interatomic potential
P. Keblinski1, M. Z. Bazant2, R. K. Dash1, and M. M. Treacy3 Received 26 March 2002; revised 13 June 2002; published 9 August 2002 Using molecular-dynamics simulations we study the thermodynamic behavior of a single-component covalent material described by the recently proposed environment-dependent interatomic potential (EDIP). The parametrization of EDIP for silicon exhibits a range of unusual properties typically found in more complex materials, such as the existence of two structurally distinct disordered phases, a density increase upon melting of the low-temperature amorphous phase, and negative thermal-expansion coefficients for both the crystal (at high temperatures) and the amorphous phase (at all temperatures). Structural differences between the two disordered phases also lead to a first-order transition between them, which suggests the existence of a second critical point, as is believed to exist for amorphous forms of frozen water. For EDIP-Si, however, the unusual behavior is associated not only with the open nature of tetrahedral bonding but also with a competition between fourfold (covalent) and fivefold (metallic) coordination. The unusual behavior of the model and its unique ability to simulate the liquid/amorphous transition on molecular-dynamics time scales make it a suitable prototype for fundamental studies of anomalous thermodynamics in disordered systems. ©2002 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.66.064104 [ Abstract | Previous article | Next article | Issue 6 ] |
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