论文标题
通过液体环境稳定极性晶体表面的理论
A theory for the stabilization of polar crystal surfaces by a liquid environment
论文作者
论文摘要
极性晶体表面在许多材料的功能中起着重要作用,并且在数十年中进行了广泛的研究。在本文中,提出了一个理论框架,该框架通过将周围的解决方案环境与晶体本身平等地构成,从而扩展了现有理论。例如,在考虑诸如溶液中晶体生长之类的过程时,这是有利的。通过将极晶体视为浸入溶液环境中的一堆平行板电容器,通过最大程度地减少系统的自由能来得出平衡吸附的表面电荷密度。类似于零温度下极性晶体表面的众所周知的分化表面能,对于溶液中的晶体,表明“极性灾难”表现为不同的自由能成本,可以使系统与平衡扰动。与现有理论相比,目前的配方预测,吸附的表面电荷密度的波动会随着晶体厚度的增加而越来越抑制。我们还展示了在界面的理论和计算研究中经常使用的平板几何形状中,电位位移场是作为静电边界条件出现的,其起源的起源植根于板几何本身,而不是使用周期性边界条件。这项工作的这一方面为最近的观察结果提供了更牢固的理论基础,即标准的“平板校正”无法正确描述解决方案中的极性晶体表面。
Polar crystal surfaces play an important role in the functionality of many materials, and have been studied extensively over many decades. In this article, a theoretical framework is presented that extends existing theories by placing the surrounding solution environment on an equal footing with the crystal itself; this is advantageous, e.g., when considering processes such as crystal growth from solution. By considering the polar crystal as a stack of parallel plate capacitors immersed in a solution environment, the equilibrium adsorbed surface charge density is derived by minimizing the free energy of the system. In analogy to the well-known diverging surface energy of a polar crystal surface at zero temperature, for a crystal in solution it is shown that the "polar catastrophe" manifests as a diverging free energy cost to perturb the system from equilibrium. Going further than existing theories, the present formulation predicts that fluctuations in the adsorbed surface charge density become increasingly suppressed with increasing crystal thickness. We also show how, in the slab geometry often employed in both theoretical and computational studies of interfaces, an electric displacement field emerges as an electrostatic boundary condition, the origins of which are rooted in the slab geometry itself, rather than the use of periodic boundary conditions. This aspect of the work provides a firmer theoretical basis for the recent observation that standard "slab corrections" fail to correctly describe, even qualitatively, polar crystal surfaces in solution.