Hard disk model

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Revision as of 16:33, 7 August 2008 by Carl McBride (talk | contribs) (Added a reference and a section on the phase transitions.)
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Hard disks are hard spheres in two dimensions. The hard disk intermolecular pair potential is given by

where is the intermolecular pair potential between two disks at a distance , and is the diameter of the disk.

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. In a recent publication by Mak (Ref. 5) using over 4 million particles one appears to have the phase diagram isotropic hexatic solid.

Equations of state

Main article: Equations of state for hard disks

Virial coefficients

Main article: Hard sphere: virial coefficients

External links

References

  1. Nicholas Metropolis, Arianna W. Rosenbluth, Marshall N. Rosenbluth, Augusta H. Teller and Edward Teller, "Equation of State Calculations by Fast Computing Machines", Journal of Chemical Physics 21 pp.1087-1092 (1953)
  1. Ya G Sinai "Dynamical systems with elastic reflections", Russian Mathematical Surveys 25 pp. 137-189 (1970)
  2. 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)
  3. Carl McBride and Carlos Vega "Fluid solid equilibrium for two dimensional tangent hard disk chains from Wertheim's perturbation theory", Journal of Chemical Physics 116 pp. 1757-1759 (2002)
  4. Nándor Simányi "Proof of the Boltzmann-Sinai ergodic hypothesis for typical hard disk systems", Inventiones Mathematicae 154 pp. 123-178 (2003)
  5. C. H. Mak "Large-scale simulations of the two-dimensional melting of hard disks", Physical Review E 73 065104(R) (2006)