Morse Stretch Potential Charge Equilibrium Force Field for Ceramics: Application to the Quartz-Stishovite Phase Transition and to Silica Glass
- 22 February 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 82 (8) , 1708-1711
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.82.1708
Abstract
To predict phase transitions in ceramics and minerals from molecular dynamics simulations, we have developed a force field in which the charges are allowed to readjust instantaneously to the atomic configurations. These charges are calculated using the charge equilibration (QEq) method. In addition to electrostatics, a two-body Morse stretch potential is included to account for short-range nonelectrostatic interactions. This MS-Q potential is applied herein to , where we find that it describes well the fourfold coordinated and sixfold coordinated systems (such as quartz and stishovite), silica glass, and the pressure-induced phase transition from quartz to stishovite.
Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Magnetic Collapse in Transition Metal Oxides at High Pressure: Implications for the EarthScience, 1997
- Wetting of crystalline polymer surfaces: A molecular dynamics simulationThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1995
- Ab Initio and Semiempirical Electronic Structural Studies on Bis(ethylenedithio)tetrathiafulvalene (BEDT-TTF or ET)The Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1994
- Ionization of helium by a short pulse of radiation: A Fermi molecular-dynamics calculationPhysical Review A, 1994
- Thermodynamic and Elastic Properties of Polyethylene at Elevated TemperaturesMRS Proceedings, 1992
- Charge equilibration for molecular dynamics simulationsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1991
- Irreversible phase transitions and wave propagation in silicate geologic materialsJournal of Applied Physics, 1990
- First-Principles Interatomic Potential of Silica Applied to Molecular DynamicsPhysical Review Letters, 1988
- On the nature of pressure‐induced coordination changes in silicate melts and glassesGeophysical Research Letters, 1987
- Crystal Structure and Pair Potentials: A Molecular-Dynamics StudyPhysical Review Letters, 1980