High temperature ion-thermal behavior from average-atom calculations
Abstract
Atom-in-jellium calculations of the Einstein frequency were used to calculate the mean displacement of an ion over a wide range of compression and temperature. Expressed as a fraction of the Wigner-Seitz radius, the displacement is a measure of the asymptotic freedom of the ion at high temperature, and thus of the change in heat capacity from 6 to 3 quadratic degrees of freedom per atom. A functional form for free energy was proposed based on the Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution as a correction to the Debye free energy, with a single free parameter representing the effective density of potential modes to be saturated. This parameter was investigated using molecular dynamics simulations, and found to be ~0.2 per atom. In this way, the ion-thermal contribution can be calculated for a wide-range equation of state (EOS) without requiring a large number of molecular dynamics simulations. Example calculations were performed for carbon, including the sensitivity of key EOS loci to ionic freedom.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1905.08911,
title = {High temperature ion-thermal behavior from average-atom calculations},
author = {Damian C. Swift and Mandy Bethkenhagen and Alfredo A. Correa and Thomas Lockard and Sebastien Hamel and Lorin X. Benedict and Philip A. Sterne and Bard I. Bennett},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1905.08911},
year = {2020}
}