Dimer Statistics and Phase Transitions
- 1 February 1963
- journal article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Mathematical Physics
- Vol. 4 (2) , 287-293
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1703953
Abstract
After the introduction of the concept of lattice graph and a brief discussion of its role in the theory of the Ising model, a related combinatorial problem is discussed, namely that of the statistics of non-overlapping dimers, each occupying two neighboring sites of a lattice graph. It is shown that the configurational partition function of this system can be expressed in terms of a Pfaffian, and hence calculated explicitly, if the lattice graph is planar and if the dimers occupy all lattice sites. By the examples of the quadratic and the hexagonal lattice, it is found that the dimer system may show a phase transition similar to that of a two-dimensional Ising model, or one of a different nature, or no transition at all, depending on the activities of various classes of bonds. The Ising problem is then shown to be equivalent to a generalized dimer problem, and a rederivation, of Onsager's expression for the Ising partition function of a rectangular lattice graph is sketched on the basis of this equivalence.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Statistical Mechanics of Dimers on a Plane LatticePhysical Review B, 1961
- The statistics of dimers on a latticePhysica, 1961
- Dimer problem in statistical mechanics-an exact resultPhilosophical Magazine, 1961
- Available methods of estimating the most probable configurations of simple models of a macromoleculeDiscussions of the Faraday Society, 1958
- POISSON'S PARTIAL DIFFERENCE EQUATIONThe Quarterly Journal of Mathematics, 1955
- A cell-cluster theory for the liquid state. IIPhysica, 1954
- A Combinatorial Solution of the Two-Dimensional Ising ModelPhysical Review B, 1952
- Order-disorder in hexagonal latticesPhysica, 1950
- The Factorization of Linear GraphsJournal of the London Mathematical Society, 1947
- Statistical theory of the adsorption of double moleculesProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1939