Abstract
We have mapped out the complete phase diagram of hard spherocylinders as a function of the shape anisotropy LID. Special computational techniques were required to locate phase transitions in the limit L/D→∞ and in the close-packing limit for L/D→0. The phase boundaries of five different phases were established: the isotropic fluid, the liquid crystalline smectic A and nematic phases, the orientationally ordered solids - in AAA and ABC stacking - and the plastic or rotator solid. The rotator phase is unstable for L/D≥0.35 and the AAA crystal becomes unstable for lengths smaller than L/D≈7. The triple points isotropic-smectic-A-solid and isotropic-nematic-smectic-A are estimated to occur at L/D = 3.1 and LID = 3.7. respectively. For the low L/D region, a modified version of the Gibbs-Duhem integration method was used to calculate the isotropic-solid coexistence curves. This method was also applied to the I-N transition for L/D>10. For large LID the simulation results approach the predictions of the Onsager theory. In the limit L/D→∞ simulations were performed by application of a scaling technique. The nematic-smectic-A transition for LID→∞ appears to be continuous. As the nematic-smectic-A transition is certainly of first order nature for L/D≤5, the tri-critical point is presumably located between L/D = 5 and LID = ∞. In the small L/D region, the plastic solid to aligned solid transition is first order. Using a mapping of the dense spherocylinder system on a lattice model, the initial slope of the coexistence curve could even be computed in the close-packing limit. © 1997 American Institute of Physics.
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CITATION STYLE
Bolhuis, P., & Frenkel, D. (1997). Tracing the phase boundaries of hard spherocylinders. Journal of Chemical Physics, 106(2), 666–687. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.473404
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