First-principles simulations and shock Hugoniot calculations of warm dense neon
Abstract
All-electron path integral Monte Carlo (PIMC) and density functional theory molecular dynamics (DFT-MD) simulations provide a consistent, first-principles investigation of warm dense neon plasmas in the density-temperature range of 1-15 g cm-3 and 104-109 K. At high temperatures, DFT-MD becomes intractable because of too many partially occupied bands, while at lower temperatures, PIMC is intractable because of the free-particle approximation of fermion nodes. In combination, PIMC and DFT-MD pressures and internal energies provide a coherent equation of state with a region of overlap in which the two methods cross-validate each other. Pair-correlation functions at various temperatures and densities provide details of the plasma structure and the temperature-driven ionization process. The electronic density of states of neon shows that a gap persists for the highest density-temperature conditions studied here with DFT-MD. Finally, the computed shock Hugoniot curves show an increase in compression as the first and second shells are ionized.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review B
- Pub Date:
- January 2015
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevB.91.045103
- Bibcode:
- 2015PhRvB..91d5103D
- Keywords:
-
- 62.50.-p;
- 31.15.A-;
- 61.20.Ja;
- 64.30.-t;
- High-pressure effects in solids and liquids;
- Ab initio calculations;
- Computer simulation of liquid structure;
- Equations of state of specific substances