First-principles modeling of three-body interactions in highly compressed solid helium

Claudio Cazorla and Jordi Boronat
Phys. Rev. B 92, 224113 – Published 31 December 2015

Abstract

We present a set of three-body interaction models based on the Slater-Kirkwood (SK) potential that are suitable for the study of the energy, structural, and elastic properties of solid He4 at high pressure. Our effective three-body potentials are obtained from the fit to total energies and atomic forces computed with the van der Waals density functional theory method due to Grimme, and represent an improvement with respect to previously reported three-body interaction models. In particular, we show that some of the introduced SK three-body potentials reproduce closely the experimental equation of state and bulk modulus of solid helium up to a pressure of 60 GPa, when used in combination with standard pairwise interaction models in diffusion Monte Carlo simulations. Importantly, we find that recent predictions reporting a surprisingly small variation of the kinetic energy and Lindeman ratio on quantum crystals under increasing pressure are likely to be artifacts deriving from the use of incomplete interaction models. Also, we show that the experimental variation of the shear modulus, C44, at pressures 0P25 GPa can be quantitatively described by our set of SK three-body potentials. At higher compression, however, the agreement between our C44 calculations and experiments deteriorates and thus we argue that higher order many-body terms in the expansion of the atomic interactions probably are necessary in order to better describe elasticity in very dense solid He4.

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  • Received 15 September 2015
  • Revised 15 December 2015

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.92.224113

©2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Claudio Cazorla1,2,* and Jordi Boronat3,†

  • 1School of Materials Science and Engineering, UNSW Australia, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia
  • 2Integrated Materials Design Centre, UNSW Australia, Sydney NSW 2052, Australia
  • 3Departament de Física i Enginyeria Nuclear, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Campus Nord B4-B5, E-08034 Barcelona, Spain

  • *c.cazorla@unsw.edu.au
  • jordi.boronat@upc.edu

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Vol. 92, Iss. 22 — 1 December 2015

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