Using multistate dynamical corrections to compute classically exact diffusion constants at arbitrary temperature
- 1 February 1989
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 90 (3) , 2045-2049
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.455995
Abstract
A method is presented for computing the classically exact, surface or bulk diffusion constant of a point defect at arbitrary temperature. The thermal diffusion constant is expressed using the squared jump length averaged over all possible final states to which the atom can jump. The rate constants that weight this sum are computed using transition state theory and molecular dynamics within a recently developed many-state dynamical corrections formalism. While these rate constants are valid only in the rare-event regime (i.e., at low temperature), it is shown that for a periodic lattice of equivalent binding sites, the resulting diffusion contants is valid at any temperature for which the lattice sites remain well defined. It is thus possible to compute classically exact surface or bulk diffusion constant for an arbitrary interatomic potential, without the time scale limitations of direct molecular dynamics.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Jump rate of the fcc vacancy in the short-memory–augmented-rate-theory approximation. II. Dynamical conversion coefficient and isotope-effect factorPhysical Review B, 1987
- Recent Developments in the Theory of Surface DiffusionAnnual Review of Physical Chemistry, 1987
- Theory of classical diffusion jumps in solids. II. Isotope effect and first-order anharmonic termsPhysical Review B, 1987
- Theory of classical diffusion jumps in solidsPhysical Review B, 1985
- A Monte Carlo method for determining free-energy differences and transition state theory rate constantsThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Dynamical corrections to transition state theory for multistate systems: Surface self-diffusion in the rare-event regimeThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1985
- Theoretical studies of surface diffusion: Self-diffusion in the fcc(100) systemThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1983
- A molecular dynamics study of surface self-diffusionJournal of Physics F: Metal Physics, 1981
- Molecular dynamics of surface diffusion. I. The motion of adatoms and clustersThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1979
- Statistical investigation of dissociation cross-sections for diatomsDiscussions of the Faraday Society, 1962