Crystal nucleation and liquid-liquid transition in deeply supercooled silicon

ORAL

Abstract

The possibility of a liquid-liquid phase transition in several network-forming liquids such as water, silica and silicon has been intensely investigated over several years. In the majority of cases these putative transitions occur at conditions far below the melting temperature. Under such conditions, the kinetics of crystallisation in principle poses a challenge towards observing such a transition. In fact, it has been argued, on the basis of reversible free energy calculations, that the evidence points instead towards slow, but spontaneous, crystallisation. Robust evidence of well-defined metastable liquid states and a liquid-liquid transition has been found for a number of models of water. These studies also show a clear free energy barrier to crystallisation under the relevant conditions. We study crystal nucleation in liquid silicon through computer simulations of a classical model, with the aim of answering the specific question of whether a well-defined metastable liquid exists under the relevant conditions. We find, that indeed a barrier to crystallisation exists, and that the choice of order parameter is crucial. We also discuss the effect of changes in the microscopic structure of the liquid on the free energy barriers to crystallisation.

*We acknowledge the Thematic Unit of Excellence on Computational Materials Science, and the National Supercomputing Mission facility (Param Yukti) at the Jawaharlal Nehru Center for Advanced Scientific Research for computational resources. SS acknowledges support through the JC Bose Fellowship (JBR/2020/000015) SERB, DST (India).

Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2108.13749.pdf

Presenters

  • Yagyik Goswami

    • JNCASR

Authors

  • Srikanth Sastry

    • Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Sci
  • Yagyik Goswami

    • JNCASR
  • Vishwas V. Vasisht

    • IIT Palakkad
    • Indian Institute of Technology
  • Pablo G Debenedetti

    • Princeton University
  • Daan Frenkel

    • University of Cambridge
    • Cambridge University