Scaled free energies, power-law potentials, strain pseudospins and quasi-universality for first-order structural transitions
S.R. Shenoy, T. Lookman, and A. Saxena

TL;DR
This paper develops a universal framework for understanding first-order ferroelastic phase transitions using scaled free energies, revealing quasi-universal minima configurations and power-law anisotropic interactions across various transition types.
Contribution
It introduces a scaled, material-independent description of ferroelastic transitions, connecting minima configurations to inscribed polyhedra and deriving explicit anisotropic interactions.
Findings
Minima form polyhedra inscribed in a unit sphere, specific to transition type.
Derived explicit power-law anisotropic interactions for all considered transitions.
Identified quasi-universality in scaled minima and interactions across different materials.
Abstract
We consider ferroelastic first-order phase transitions with order-parameter strains entering Landau free energies as invariant polynomials, that have structural-variant Landau minima. The total free energy includes (seemingly innocuous) harmonic terms, in the {\it non}-order-parameter strains. Four 3D transitions are considered, tetragonal/orthorhombic, cubic/tetragonal, cubic/trigonal and cubic/orthorhombic unit-cell distortions, with respectively, and 2; and and 6. Five 2D transitions are also considered, as simpler examples. Following Barsch and Krumhansl, we scale the free energy to absorb most material-dependent elastic coefficients into an overall prefactor, by scaling in an overall elastic energy density; a dimensionless temperature variable; and the spontaneous-strain magnitude at transition . To…
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.
