Hard disk model: Difference between revisions

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m (→‎Phase transitions: Added classic reference)
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*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.30.2755    Katherine J. Strandburg, John A. Zollweg, and G. V. Chester "Bond-angular order in two-dimensional Lennard-Jones and hard-disk systems", Physical Review B '''30''' pp. 2755 - 2759 (1984)]
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.30.2755    Katherine J. Strandburg, John A. Zollweg, and G. V. Chester "Bond-angular order in two-dimensional Lennard-Jones and hard-disk systems", Physical Review B '''30''' pp. 2755 - 2759 (1984)]
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00222-003-0304-9 Nándor Simányi "Proof of the Boltzmann-Sinai ergodic hypothesis for typical hard disk systems", Inventiones Mathematicae  '''154''' pp. 123-178 (2003)]
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00222-003-0304-9 Nándor Simányi "Proof of the Boltzmann-Sinai ergodic hypothesis for typical hard disk systems", Inventiones Mathematicae  '''154''' pp. 123-178 (2003)]
*[http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3687921 Roland Roth, Klaus Mecke, and Martin Oettel "Communication: Fundamental measure theory for hard disks: Fluid and solid", Journal of Chemical Physics '''136''' 081101 (2012)]
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.smac.lps.ens.fr/index.php/Programs_Chapter_2:_Hard_disks_and_spheres Hard disks and spheres] computer code on SMAC-wiki.
*[http://www.smac.lps.ens.fr/index.php/Programs_Chapter_2:_Hard_disks_and_spheres Hard disks and spheres] computer code on SMAC-wiki.
[[Category: Models]]
[[Category: Models]]

Revision as of 13:44, 23 February 2012

Hard disks are hard spheres in two dimensions. The hard disk intermolecular pair potential is given by[1] [2]

where is the intermolecular pair potential between two disks at a distance , and is the diameter of the disk. This page treats hard disks in a two-dimensional space, for three dimensions see the page hard disks in a three dimensional space.

Phase transitions

Despite the apparent simplicity of this model/system, the phase behaviour and the nature of the phase transitions remains an area of active study ever since the early work of Alder and Wainwright [3]. In a recent publication by Mak [4] using over 4 million particles one appears to have the phase diagram isotropic , a hexatic phase, and a solid phase (the maximum possible packing fraction is given by [5]) . Similar results have been found using the BBGKY hierarchy [6] and by studying tessellations (the hexatic region: ) [7].

Equations of state

Main article: Equations of state for hard disks

Virial coefficients

Main article: Hard sphere: virial coefficients

References

Related reading

External links