Dimer covering and percolation frustration

Amir Haji-Akbari, Nasim Haji-Akbari, and Robert M. Ziff
Phys. Rev. E 92, 032134 – Published 24 September 2015

Abstract

Covering a graph or a lattice with nonoverlapping dimers is a problem that has received considerable interest in areas, such as discrete mathematics, statistical physics, chemistry, and materials science. Yet, the problem of percolation on dimer-covered lattices has received little attention. In particular, percolation on lattices that are fully covered by nonoverlapping dimers has not evidently been considered. Here, we propose a procedure for generating random dimer coverings of a given lattice. We then compute the bond percolation threshold on random and ordered coverings of the square and the triangular lattices on the remaining bonds connecting the dimers. We obtain pc=0.367713(2) and pc=0.235340(1) for random coverings of the square and the triangular lattices, respectively. We observe that the percolation frustration induced as a result of dimer covering is larger in the low-coordination-number square lattice. There is also no relationship between the existence of long-range order in a covering of the square lattice and its percolation threshold. In particular, an ordered covering of the square lattice, denoted by shifted covering in this paper, has an unusually low percolation threshold and is topologically identical to the triangular lattice. This is in contrast to the other ordered dimer coverings considered in this paper, which have higher percolation thresholds than the random covering. In the case of the triangular lattice, the percolation thresholds of the ordered and random coverings are very close, suggesting the lack of sensitivity of the percolation threshold to microscopic details of the covering in highly coordinated networks.

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  • Received 16 July 2015

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.92.032134

©2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Amir Haji-Akbari1,*, Nasim Haji-Akbari2,†, and Robert M. Ziff2,‡

  • 1Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
  • 2Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-2136, USA

  • *hajakbar@princeton.edu
  • nasimh@umich.edu
  • rziff@umich.edu

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Vol. 92, Iss. 3 — September 2015

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