Crystallization of magnetic dipolar monolayers: a density functional approach
Abstract
We employ density functional theory to study in detail the crystallization of super-paramagnetic particles in two dimensions under the influence of an external magnetic field that lies perpendicular to the confining plane. The field induces non-fluctuating magnetic dipoles on the particles, resulting into an interparticle interaction that scales as the inverse cube of the distance separating them. In line with previous findings for long-range interactions in three spatial dimensions, we find that explicit inclusion of liquid-state structural information on the {\it triplet} correlations is crucial to yield theoretical predictions that agree quantitatively with experiment. A non-perturbative treatment is superior to the oft-employed functional Taylor expansions, truncated at second or third order. We go beyond the usual Gaussian parametrization of the density site-orbitals by performing free minimizations with respect to both the shape and the normalization of the profiles, allowing for finite defect concentrations.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0804.3299,
title = {Crystallization of magnetic dipolar monolayers: a density functional approach},
author = {Sven van Teeffelen and Hartmut Löwen and Christos N. Likos},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0804.3299},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
23 pages, 18 figures