Article,

Phase separation frustrated by the long-range Coulomb interaction. I. Theory

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Phys. Rev. B, 64 (23): 235127 (December 2001)
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.64.235127

Abstract

We analyze the combined effect of the long-range Coulomb (LRC) interaction and of surface energy on first-order density-driven phase transitions between two phases in the presence of a compensating rigid background. In the coexistence region we study mixed states formed by regions of one phase surrounded by the other in the case in which the scale of the inhomogeneities is much larger than the interparticle distance. Two geometries are studied in detail: spherical drops of one phase into the other and a layered structure of one phase alternating with the other. In the latter case we find the optimum density profile in an approximation in which the free energy is a function of the local density local density approximation (LDA). It is shown that an approximation in which the density is assumed to be uniform uniform density approximation (UDA) within each phase region gives results very similar to those of the more involved LDA approach. Within the UDA we derive the general equations for the chemical potential and the pressures of each phase which generalize the Maxwell construction to this situation. The equations are valid for a rather arbitrary geometry. We find that the transition to the mixed state is quite abrupt; i.e.; inhomogeneities of the first phase appear with a finite value of the radius and of the phase volume fraction. The maximum size of the inhomogeneities is found to be on the scale of a few electric field screening lengths. Contrary to the ordinary Maxwell construction; the inverse specific volume of each phase depends here on the global density in the coexistence region and can decrease as the global density increases. The range of densities in which coexistence is observed shrinks as the LRC interaction increases until it reduces to a singular point. We argue that close to this singular point the system undergoes a lattice instability as long as the inverse lattice compressibility is finite.

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