Atomic-to-Continuum Multiscale Modeling of Defects in Crystals With Nonlocal Electrostatic Interactions

Abstract

This work develops a multiscale modeling framework for defects in crystals with general geometries and boundary conditions in which ionic interactions are important, with potential application to ionic solids and electric field interactions with materials. The overall strategy is posed in the framework of the quasicontinuum multiscale method; specifically, the use of a finite element inspired kinematic description enables a significant reduction in the large number of degrees-of-freedom to describe the atomic positions. The key advance of this work is a method for the efficient and accurate treatment of nonlocal electrostatic charge–charge interactions without restrictions on the geometry or boundary conditions. Electrostatic interactions are long range with slow decay and hence require consideration of all pairs of charges making a brute-force approach computationally prohibitive. The method proposed here accounts for the exact charge–charge interactions in the near-field and uses a coarse-grained approximation in the far-field. The coarse-grained approximation and the associated errors are rigorously derived based on the limit of a finite body with a small periodic lengthscale, thereby enabling the errors in the approximation to be controlled to a desired tolerance. The method is applied to a simple model of gallium nitride, and it is shown that electrostatic interactions can be approximated with a desired level of accuracy using the proposed methodology.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Nov 18, 2022
Source ID
10.1115/1.4056111

Entities

People

  • Jaroslaw Knap
  • Jason Marshall
  • Kaushik Dayal
  • Prashant K Jha

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Army Research Office
  • Carnegie Mellon University
  • National Science Foundation
  • Northrop Grumman
  • Office of Naval Research
  • United States Army Research Laboratory
  • University of Texas at Austin

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Distributed Systems and Data Platform Development
  • Finite Element Method (FEM) for solving Partial Differential Equations (PDEs)
  • Quantum Dot Semiconductor Device Photonics and Graphene Optoelectronic Materials and THz Physics.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics