Multiphase behaviour of the plane quadratic lattice gas with nearest-neighbour exclusion and next-nearest-neighbour finite interaction

1982 ◽  
Vol 15 (8) ◽  
pp. 2515-2522 ◽  
Author(s):  
E V Aksenenko ◽  
Yu V Shulepov
2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. 170824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin J. Morgan

Ionic transport in solid electrolytes can often be approximated as ions performing a sequence of hops between distinct lattice sites. If these hops are uncorrelated, quantitative relationships can be derived that connect microscopic hopping rates to macroscopic transport coefficients; i.e. tracer diffusion coefficients and ionic conductivities. In real materials, hops are uncorrelated only in the dilute limit. At non-dilute concentrations, the relationships between hopping frequency, diffusion coefficient and ionic conductivity deviate from the random walk case, with this deviation quantified by single-particle and collective correlation factors, f and f I , respectively. These factors vary between materials, and depend on the concentration of mobile particles, the nature of the interactions, and the host lattice geometry. Here, we study these correlation effects for the garnet lattice using lattice-gas Monte Carlo simulations. We find that, for non-interacting particles (volume exclusion only), single-particle correlation effects are more significant than for any previously studied three-dimensional lattice. This is attributed to the presence of two-coordinate lattice sites, which causes correlation effects intermediate between typical three-dimensional and one-dimensional lattices. Including nearest-neighbour repulsion and on-site energies produces more complex single-particle correlations and introduces collective correlations. We predict particularly strong correlation effects at x Li =3 (from site energies) and x Li =6 (from nearest-neighbour repulsion), where x Li =9 corresponds to a fully occupied lithium sublattice. Both effects are consequences of ordering of the mobile particles. Using these simulation data, we consider tuning the mobile-ion stoichiometry to maximize the ionic conductivity, and show that the ‘optimal’ composition is highly sensitive to the precise nature and strength of the microscopic interactions. Finally, we discuss the practical implications of these results in the context of lithium garnets and other solid electrolytes.


1992 ◽  
Vol 72 (2-4) ◽  
pp. 161-168
Author(s):  
R. Mejdani ◽  
A. Gashi ◽  
M. Ifti

Author(s):  
David Cockayne ◽  
David McKenzie

The technique of Electron Reduced Density Function (RDF) analysis has ben developed into a rapid analytical tool for the analysis of small volumes of amorphous or polycrystalline materials. The energy filtered electron diffraction pattern is collected to high scattering angles (currendy to s = 2 sinθ/λ = 6.5 Å-1) by scanning the selected area electron diffraction pattern across the entrance aperture to a GATAN parallel energy loss spectrometer. The diffraction pattern is then converted to a reduced density function, G(r), using mathematical procedures equivalent to those used in X-ray and neutron diffraction studies.Nearest neighbour distances accurate to 0.01 Å are obtained routinely, and bond distortions of molecules can be determined from the ratio of first to second nearest neighbour distances. The accuracy of coordination number determinations from polycrystalline monatomic materials (eg Pt) is high (5%). In amorphous systems (eg carbon, silicon) it is reasonable (10%), but in multi-element systems there are a number of problems to be overcome; to reduce the diffraction pattern to G(r), the approximation must be made that for all elements i,j in the system, fj(s) = Kji fi,(s) where Kji is independent of s.


1985 ◽  
Vol 46 (C9) ◽  
pp. C9-141-C9-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Froböse ◽  
J. Jäckle
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Violet Bassey Eneyo

This paper examines the distribution of hospitality services in Uyo Urban, Nigeria. GIS method was the primary tool used for data collection. A global positioning system (GPS) Garmin 60 model was used in tracking the location of 102 hospitality services in the study area. One hypothesis was stated and tested using the nearest neighbour analysis. The finding shows evidence of clustering of the various hospitality services. The tested hypothesis further indicated that hospitality services clustered in areas that guarantee a sustainable level of patronage to maximize profit. Thus, the hospitality services clustered in selected streets in the metropolis while limited numbers were found outside the city’s central area.


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