Crystallization for a Brenner-like potential
From MaRDI portal
Publication:512323
DOI10.1007/s00220-016-2732-6zbMath1381.74044arXiv1512.04489OpenAlexW3102434873MaRDI QIDQ512323
Selim Esedoḡlu, Brittan Farmer, Peter Smereka
Publication date: 24 February 2017
Published in: Communications in Mathematical Physics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1512.04489
Crystalline structure (74E15) Energy minimization in equilibrium problems in solid mechanics (74G65) Statistical mechanics of crystals (82D25) Crystals in solids (74N05) Boundary behavior (theorems of Fatou type, etc.) of harmonic functions in two dimensions (31A20)
Related Items
Uniform energy distribution in a pattern-forming system of surface charges ⋮ Tilings with nonflat squares: a characterization ⋮ Stable carbon configurations ⋮ A proof of finite crystallization via stratification ⋮ Carbon-Nanotube Geometries as Optimal Configurations ⋮ Approximate Global Minimizers to Pairwise Interaction Problems via Convex Relaxation ⋮ Ripples in graphene: a variational approach ⋮ Attractive Riesz potentials acting on hard spheres ⋮ Characterization of optimal carbon nanotubes under stretching and validation of the Cauchy-Born rule ⋮ Crystallization to the square lattice for a two-body potential ⋮ Graphene ground states ⋮ Finite Crystallization and Wulff shape emergence for ionic compounds in the square lattice ⋮ Crystallization in the hexagonal lattice for ionic dimers ⋮ The Geometry of $C_{60}$: A Rigorous Approach via Molecular Mechanics ⋮ Wulff shape emergence in graphene ⋮ Bounds on the geometric complexity of optimal centroidal Voronoi tesselations in 3D ⋮ Stability of Z2 configurations in 3D
Cites Work
- On the crystallization of 2D hexagonal lattices
- A proof of crystallization in two dimensions
- The elastic modulus of single-wall carbon nanotubes: a continuum analysis incorporating interatomic potentials.
- Crystallization in carbon nanostructures
- A theorem on geometric rigidity and the derivation of nonlinear plate theory from three-dimensional elasticity