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South China University of Technology

South China University of Technology. Growth of Cluster. Xiaobao Yang Department of Physics. www.compphys.cn. Clusters experimentally observed . C 60. Graphene fragments. C 20. ACS nano,6,8203(2012). Nature 318,162(1985); 407,60(2000);. Diamond fragments.

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South China University of Technology

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  1. South China University of Technology Growth of Cluster Xiaobao Yang Department of Physics www.compphys.cn

  2. Clusters experimentally observed C60 Graphene fragments C20 ACS nano,6,8203(2012) Nature 318,162(1985); 407,60(2000);

  3. Diamond fragments Science 299, 96 (2003);PRL, 103,047402(2009)

  4. B20 B19 http://www.chem.brown.edu/research/LSWang/ http://www.tsinghua.edu.cn/publish/chemen/2141/2011/20110413125809079217484/20110413125809079217484_.html

  5. The Geometry of Universe Platonic and Archimedean solids http://blog.sciencenet.cn/home.php?mod=space&uid=279992&do=blog&id=509211 Nature425, 593-595. 9 October 2003

  6. How Clusters are found? Dense Packing and Symmetry in Small Clusters of Microspheres Wulf’s construction Science 301,403(2003)

  7. The growth and evolution of Clusters Nucleation / Diffusion / Reconstruction Substrate / bonding / Temperature

  8. Cluster growth model No diffusion vs Full diffusion

  9. Cluster Growth Model • Diffusion Limited Aggregation (DLA) Model • Discussion on programming • Choose initial position of a walker at random on a circle r0. • If the walker wanders too far from the cluster (say, >1.5r0), start a new walker. • As the cluster grows, r0 should be increased. (say, keep r0=5Rcluster) • When the walker is far from the cluster, a greater step size may be adopted. Refer to DLA.m • Fractals? The dimensionality of clusters?

  10. DLA.m clear; clf; M = 300; N=1000; % MxM grid; N particles; A=zeros(M,M); for i=1:M; for j=1:M; if(abs(i-M/2)<M/40 & j==round(M/2)) A(i,j)=-1; end; end; end; %imagesc(A); hold on nparticle=0; while(nparticle < N) %generate a random walker within the belt of 3/5*M/2<R<4/5*M/2 r=(rand/5+3/5)*M/2; theta=rand*pi*2; x=round(r*cos(theta)+M/2); y=round(r*sin(theta)+M/2); check = 1; R=M*9/20; % checker for walkers wandering too far i.e., |walker-center|>R. % if not meet the seed, continue wandering while( A(x-1,y) ~= -1 & A(x+1,y) ~= -1 & A(x,y-1) ~= -1 & A(x,y+1) ~= -1) x=x+sign(rand-0.5); y=y+sign(rand-0.5); if( abs(x-M/2)>M*9/20 || abs(y-M/2)>M*9/20 ); check=0; break; end; %walker elimated if wandering too far! end if(check==1); A(x,y) = -1; nparticle = nparticle + 1; end; %meets seed; seed updated. %if(mod(nparticle,100)==0); imagesc(A); end end; colormap(winter); imagesc(A); axis([0 M 0 M],'square','equal'); 1)Place the seed 2)Atomic random walk towards the seed 3) Check if the atom is attached 4) Neglect the atom far from the seed 5) Draw the cluster

  11. Matlab: illustration colormap image() imagesc() pcolor()

  12. Cluster Growth Model • Eden Model Consider a two dimensional lattice of points (x, y). Placing a seed particle at the origin (x = 0, y = 0). Growing by the addition of particles to its perimeter. unoccupied near-neighbor sites as the perimeter sites of the cluster. Choose one of these perimeter sites at random and place a particle at the chosen location. This process is then repeated; update perimeter and particle. Continue this process until a cluster of the desired size is obtained. Eden Cluster

  13. nearest clear x=[0 0]; %initial nearest=[0 1 0 -1 1 0 -1 0]; edge=nearest; %perimeter for ii=1 growsite=ceil(length(edge)*rand); tmp=ones(4,1)*edge(growsite,:)+nearest; x=[x edge(growsite,:)]; tmp=[tmp edge]; edge=setdiff(tmp,x,'rows'); end x edge x tmp

  14. Dimensionality of the cluster For a straight line: where r is small enough.

  15. Eden vs. DLA cluster

  16. Morphology of a Class of Kinetic Growth Models Place a seed particle at a site on a two dimensional square lattice. 1)Check the four neighbors of the seed and occupy each one, independently, with a probability p 2)Sample the nearest neighbors of the second generation and fill these sites independently with a probability p. sites which are not filled are blocked and cannot be filled at a later time. p = l, (b) p = 0.9, (c) p = 0.8, (d) p = 0.7,(e) p = 0.6, (f) p = 0.545. If we modify our model so that all perimeter sites are active growth sites for all time, then we approach the Eden model in the limit p->0. PRL,55,2515(1985)

  17. clear x=[0 0]; %initial edge=[0 1 0 -1 1 0 -1 0]; nearest=edge; p=0.6 % propobality unactive=[]; for ii=1:200%generation growsite=rand(size(edge,1),1)<p; if max(mod(growsite+1,2))>0 unactive=[unactive edge((growsite==0),:)]; end x=[x edge(growsite,:)]; tmp=edge(growsite,:); for jj=1:size(tmp,1) edge=[edge repmat(tmp(jj,:),size(nearest,1),1)+nearest]; end edge=setdiff(edge,x,'rows'); if length(unactive)>0 edge=setdiff(edge,unactive,'rows'); end end 1) Select the active sites with p 2) Record the unactive sites 3) Add atoms and update edge 4) Delete edge from cluster and unactive sites plot(x(:,1),x(:,2),'*') hold on plot(edge(:,1),edge(:,2),'o') axis equal plot(unactive(:,1),unactive(:,2),'ro')

  18. The role of energy Shapes in square lattice: Diamond Square Triangular

  19. Simulation of cluster 1) Adding atoms 2) Atom diffusion allowed Adding and deleting to conserve the number of atoms 3) Energy estimation 4) Accept or reject the configuration

  20. Spanning clusters

  21. Percolation Problems • Porous rock • (Original percolation problem, Broadbent and Hammersley, 1957) 2. Forest fires, etc How far from each other should trees in a forest (orchard) be planted in order to minimize the spread of fire (blight)? Suppose a large porous rock is submerged under water for a long time, will the water reach the center of the stone? p=0.48

  22. What is percolation 2-dimension percolation Percolated system if a spanning cluster exist (connects top and bottom exists) 2x2 lattice What is the probability for a system to be percolated for a given coverage? 6x6 ? Infinite x infinite (critical coverage) 120x120

  23. Simulation of Percolation

  24. Percolation clear, clf, colormap gray; M=24; p=0.7; A=rand(M,M); for i=1:M; for j=1:M; if(A(i,j)<p ) A(i,j)=0; else A(i,j)=1; end end; end imagesc(A) for ii=1:size(A,1) for jj=1:size(A,2) text(jj,ii,num2str(A(ii,jj))); hold on end end

  25. Divide the data into two groups rock=[]; hole=[]; for ii=1:size(A,1) for jj=1:size(A,2) if A(ii,jj)==1 rock=[rock ii jj]; else hole=[hole ii jj]; end end end A=[ 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ];

  26. Find the spanning clusters for ii=3%1:size(hole,1) tp1=hole(ii,:); tp2=[tp1 repmat(tp1,size(nearest,1),1)+nearest]; tp2=intersect(tp2,hole,'rows'); while size(tp1,1)<size(tp2,1) tp1=tp2; for jj=1:size(tp1,1) tp2=[tp2 repmat(tp1(jj,:),size(nearest,1),1)+nearest]; end tp2=intersect(tp2,hole,'rows'); end cluster(ii,:) =[min(tp2(:,1)) max(tp2(:,1)) min(tp2(:,2)) max(tp2(:,2))]; end

  27. Homework Apply the model in PRL,55,2515(1985) for triangular and hexagonal lattice. Sending to 17273799@qq.com when ready For lecture notes, refer to http://www.compphys.cn/~xbyang/

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