English

Disordered Crystals from First Principles I: Quantifying the Configuration Space

Computational Physics 2018-04-04 v2 Mathematical Physics math.MP Chemical Physics Classical Physics Quantum Physics

Abstract

This work represents the first chapter of a project on the foundations of first-principle calculations of the electron transport in crystals at finite temperatures. We are interested in the range of temperatures, where most electronic components operate, that is, room temperature and above. The aim is a predictive first-principle formalism that combines ab-initio molecular dynamics and a finite-temperature Kubo-formula for homogeneous thermodynamic phases. The input for this formula is the ergodic dynamical system (Ω,G,dP)(\Omega,\mathbb G,{\rm d}\mathbb P) defining the crystalline phase, where Ω\Omega is the configuration space for the atomic degrees of freedom, G\mathbb G is the space group acting on Ω\Omega and dP{\rm d}\mathbb P is the ergodic Gibbs measure relative to the G\mathbb G-action. The present work develops an algorithmic method for quantifying (Ω,G,dP)(\Omega,\mathbb G,{\rm d}\mathbb P) from first principles. Using the silicon crystal as a working example, we find the Gibbs measure to be extremely well characterized by a multivariate normal distribution, which can be quantified using a small number of parameters. The latter are computed at various temperatures and communicated in the form of a table. Using this table, one can generate large and accurate thermally-disordered atomic configurations to serve, for example, as input for subsequent simulations of the electronic degrees of freedom.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1711.04002,
  title  = {Disordered Crystals from First Principles I: Quantifying the Configuration Space},
  author = {Thomas D. Kühne and Emil Prodan},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1711.04002},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

33 pages, 16 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T22:42:37.779Z