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Disordered, quasicrystalline and crystalline phases of densely packed tetrahedra.
Haji-Akbari, Amir; Engel, Michael; Keys, Aaron S; Zheng, Xiaoyu; Petschek, Rolfe G; Palffy-Muhoray, Peter; Glotzer, Sharon C.
Affiliation
  • Haji-Akbari A; Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.
Nature ; 462(7274): 773-7, 2009 Dec 10.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20010683
All hard, convex shapes are conjectured by Ulam to pack more densely than spheres, which have a maximum packing fraction of phi = pi/ radical18 approximately 0.7405. Simple lattice packings of many shapes easily surpass this packing fraction. For regular tetrahedra, this conjecture was shown to be true only very recently; an ordered arrangement was obtained via geometric construction with phi = 0.7786 (ref. 4), which was subsequently compressed numerically to phi = 0.7820 (ref. 5), while compressing with different initial conditions led to phi = 0.8230 (ref. 6). Here we show that tetrahedra pack even more densely, and in a completely unexpected way. Following a conceptually different approach, using thermodynamic computer simulations that allow the system to evolve naturally towards high-density states, we observe that a fluid of hard tetrahedra undergoes a first-order phase transition to a dodecagonal quasicrystal, which can be compressed to a packing fraction of phi = 0.8324. By compressing a crystalline approximant of the quasicrystal, the highest packing fraction we obtain is phi = 0.8503. If quasicrystal formation is suppressed, the system remains disordered, jams and compresses to phi = 0.7858. Jamming and crystallization are both preceded by an entropy-driven transition from a simple fluid of independent tetrahedra to a complex fluid characterized by tetrahedra arranged in densely packed local motifs of pentagonal dipyramids that form a percolating network at the transition. The quasicrystal that we report represents the first example of a quasicrystal formed from hard or non-spherical particles. Our results demonstrate that particle shape and entropy can produce highly complex, ordered structures.

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Nature Year: 2009 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos Country of publication: Reino Unido

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Nature Year: 2009 Document type: Article Affiliation country: Estados Unidos Country of publication: Reino Unido