Dynamic response of Ag monolayers adsorbed on Au(100) upon an oscillatory variation of the chemical potential: A Monte Carlo simulation study
M. Cecilia Gimenez, Ezequiel V. Albano

TL;DR
This study uses Monte Carlo simulations to explore how Ag monolayers on Au(100) respond dynamically to oscillating chemical potentials, revealing hysteresis, dynamic phase transitions, and crossover behaviors near coexistence.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation-based analysis of the dynamic hysteresis and phase behavior of Ag monolayers under periodic chemical potential variations, highlighting the absence of true second-order transitions.
Findings
Hysteresis loops indicate dynamically ordered and disordered states.
System exhibits crossover behavior, not true second-order phase transitions.
A phase diagram in the chemical potential versus period plane is constructed.
Abstract
Based on the fact that the underpotential electrochemical deposition of Ag atoms on the surface exhibits sharp first-order phase transitions at well-defined values of the (coexistence) chemical potential (), we performed extensive simulations aimed at investigating the hysteretic dynamic behavior of the system close to coexistence upon the application of a periodic signal of the form , where and are the amplitude and the period of the sweep, respectively. For relatively short periods and small enough amplitudes the system becomes trapped either at low or high Ag coverage states, as evidenced by recording hysteresis loops. This scenario is identified as dynamically ordered states (DOS), such that the relaxation time of the corresponding metastable state obeys . On…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena · Molecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Chemical and Physical Properties of Materials
