Densest binary sphere packings
Adam B. Hopkins, Frank H. Stillinger, Salvatore Torquato

TL;DR
This paper uses advanced algorithms to discover new densest binary sphere packings, revealing a broader variety of stable structures than previously known, with potential implications for atomic and molecular systems.
Contribution
The study uncovers numerous new densest binary sphere packing structures with novel sphere ratios, expanding understanding beyond previously known alloy phases.
Findings
Identified densest packings with sphere ratios of 7:3 and 5:2.
Discovered a broader variety of stable structures.
Potential relevance to stable phases in atomic and molecular systems.
Abstract
The densest binary sphere packings in the alpha-x plane of small to large sphere radius ratio alpha and small sphere relative concentration x have historically been very difficult to determine. Previous research had led to the prediction that these packings were composed of a few known "alloy" phases including, for example, the AlB2 (hexagonal omega), HgBr2, and AuTe2 structures, and to XYn structures composed of close-packed large spheres with small spheres (in a number ratio of n to 1) in the interstices, e.g., the NaCl packing for n = 1. However, utilizing an implementation of the Torquato-Jiao sphere-packing algorithm [S. Torquato and Y. Jiao, Phys. Rev. E 82, 061302 (2010)], we have discovered that many more structures appear in the densest packings. For example, while all previously known densest structures were composed of spheres in small to large number ratios of one to one,…
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