English

Shape-Determined Kinetic Pathways in 2D Solid-Solid Phase Transitions

Soft Condensed Matter 2026-01-30 v2 Statistical Mechanics

Abstract

Solid-solid phase transitions are ubiquitous in nature, but the kinetic pathway of anisotropic particle systems remains elusive, where the coupling between translational and rotational motions plays a critical role in various kinetic processes. Here we investigate this problem by molecular dynamics simulation for two-dimensional ball-stick polygon systems, where pentagon, hexagon, and octagon systems all undergo an isostructural solid-solid phase transition. During heating, the translational motion exhibits merely a homogeneous expansion, whereas the time evolution of body-orientation is shape-determined. The local defects of body-orientation self-organize into a vague stripe for pentagon, a random pattern for hexagon, while a distinct stripe for octagon. The underlying kinetic pathway of octagon adheres to the quasi-equilibrium assumption, whereas the pathways of hexagon and pentagon are governed by translational and rotational motion, respectively. This diversity is originated from different kinetic coupling modes determined by the anisotropy of molecules, and can affect the phase transition rates. The reverse process in terms of cooling follows the same mechanism, with more diverse kinetic pathways attributed to the possible kinetic traps. Our findings promote the theoretical understanding of microscopic kinetics of solid-solid phase transitions as well as provide direct guidance for the rational design of materials utilizing desired kinetic features.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2506.20423,
  title  = {Shape-Determined Kinetic Pathways in 2D Solid-Solid Phase Transitions},
  author = {Ruijian Zhu and Yi Peng and Yanting Wang},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.20423},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

This version has been accepted by Advanced Science