6533b827fe1ef96bd1285c3d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Microscopic origins of the anomalous melting behaviour of high-pressure sodium
Hagai EshetRustam Z. KhaliullinThomas D. KühneJörg BehlerMichele Parrinellosubject
Condensed Matter - Materials ScienceMaterials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci)Soft Condensed Matter (cond-mat.soft)FOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matterdescription
Recent experiments have shown that sodium, a prototype simple metal at ambient conditions, exhibits unexpected complexity under high pressure. One of the most puzzling phenomena in the behaviour of dense sodium is the pressure-induced drop in its melting temperature, which extends from 1000 K at ~30GPa to as low as room temperature at ~120GPa. Despite significant theoretical effort to understand the anomalous melting its origins have remained unclear. In this work, we reconstruct the sodium phase diagram using an ab-initio-quality neural-network potential. We demonstrate that the reentrant behaviour results from the screening of interionic interactions by conduction electrons, which at high pressure induces a softening in the short-range repulsion. It is expected that such an effect plays an important role in governing the behaviour of a wide range of metals and alloys.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2011-10-10 |