RESUMO
Systems featuring hard-core-soft-shell repulsive pair potentials can form ordered phases, where particles organize themselves in aggregates with nontrivial geometries. The dimer crystal formed by one such potential, namely, the hard-core plus generalized exponential model of order 4, has been recently investigated, revealing a low-temperature structural phase transition, with the onset of nematic ordering of the dimers. In the present work, we aim to characterize this phase transition via a mean-field theory, by which a detailed analysis of the low-temperature properties of the system is carried out under quadrupole approximation. We determine the transition temperature and identify its order parameter, highlighting the link between the structural transition and the nematic ordering of the system. The first-order character of the transition is established and supported by the Landau expansion of the free energy in powers of the order parameter. The theory is subsequently generalized to take into account lattice vibrations and dimer length fluctuations. Finally, we provide an explanation for the anomalous behavior displayed by the specific heat in the vanishing-temperature limit, which is also supported by Monte Carlo simulations.
RESUMO
Nanostructured Au films fabricated by the assembling of nanoparticles produced in the gas phase have shown properties suitable for neuromorphic computing applications: they are characterized by a non-linear and non-local electrical behavior, featuring switches of the electric resistance whose activation is typically triggered by an applied voltage over a certain threshold. These systems can be considered as complex networks of metallic nanojunctions where thermal effects at the nanoscale cause the continuous rearrangement of regions with low and high electrical resistance. In order to gain a deeper understanding of the electrical properties of this nano granular system, we developed a model based on a large three dimensional regular resistor network with non-linear conduction mechanisms and stochastic updates of conductances. Remarkably, by increasing enough the number of nodes in the network, the features experimentally observed in the electrical conduction properties of nanostructured gold films are qualitatively reproduced in the dynamical behavior of the system. In the activated non-linear conduction regime, our model reproduces also the growing trend, as a function of the subsystem size, of quantities like Mutual and Integrated Information, which have been extracted from the experimental resistance series data via an information theoretic analysis. This indicates that nanostructured Au films (and our model) possess a certain degree of activated interconnection among different areas which, in principle, could be exploited for neuromorphic computing applications.
RESUMO
Purely pairwise interactions of the core-softened type, i.e., featuring a soft repulsion followed by a hard-core interaction at shorter distance, give rise to nontrivial equilibrium structures entirely different from the standard close packing of spheres. In particular, in a suitable low-temperature region of their phase diagram, such interactions are well known to favor a transition from a fluid to a cluster crystal. The residual mutual interaction between individual clusters can lead to the formation of patterns of their reciprocal orientations. In this work, we investigate two examples of such models in two dimensions, at the density most appropriate to the dimer phase, whereby clusters consist of just two particles, studying them with optimization techniques and Monte Carlo simulations. We focus on the dimer crystal, and unveil a second phase transition at extremely low temperature. This transition leads from a triangular dimer lattice with randomly disordered dimer orientations at high temperature to a reduced-symmetry ground state with nematic orientational order and a slightly distorted structure characterized by a centered-rectangular lattice at low temperature.
RESUMO
Soft matter systems are renowned for being able to display complex emerging phenomena such as clustering phases. Recently, a surprising quantum phase transition has been revealed in a one-dimensional (1D) system composed of bosons interacting via a pairwise soft potential in the continuum. It was shown that the spatial coordinates undergoing two-particle clustering could be mapped into quantum spin variables of a 1D transverse Ising model. In this work we investigate the manifestation of an analogous critical phenomenon in 1D classical fluids of soft particles in the continuum. In particular, we study the low-temperature behavior of three different classical models of 1D soft matter, whose interparticle interactions allow for clustering. The same string variables highlight that, at the commensurate density for the two-particle cluster phase, the peculiar pairing of neighboring soft particles can be nontrivially mapped onto a 1D discrete classical Ising model. We also observe a related phenomenon, namely the presence of an anomalous peak in the low-temperature specific heat, thus indicating the emergence of Schottky phenomenology in a nonmagnetic fluid.