Identical hard spheres in cylindrical confinement exhibit a rich variety of densest-packed columnar structures. Such structures, which generally vary with the corresponding cylinder-to-sphere diameter ratio D, serve as structural models for a variety of experimental systems at the micro- or nano-scale. In this research, the electrical conductivity as a function of D has been studied for four different types of such columnar structures. It was found that, for increasing D, the electrical conductivity of each type of structures decreases monotonously, as a result of the system’s resistive components becoming more densely packed along the long axis of the cylindrical space. However, there exists a discontinuous rise in the system’s electrical conductivity at (Formula presented.) (discontinuous zigzag-to-single-helix transition) and D = 2 (discontinuous double-helix-to-double-helix transition), respectively, as a result of the establishment of additional conducting paths upon an abrupt increase in the number of inter-particle contacts. This is not the case for the continuous single-helix-to-double-helix transition at (Formula presented.). The results, which tell us how the system’s electrical conductivity can be tuned through a variation of D, could serve as a guide for the development of quasi-one-dimensional materials with a structurally tunable electrical conductivity.
CITATION STYLE
Ma, P., & Chan, H. K. (2021). Densest-Packed Columnar Structures of Hard Spheres: An Investigation of the Structural Dependence of Electrical Conductivity. Frontiers in Physics, 9. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphy.2021.778001
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