Catalytic mechanism of LENR in quasicrystals based on localized anharmonic vibrations and phasons
Volodymyr Dubinko, Denis Laptev, Klee Irwin

TL;DR
This paper proposes a mechanism for LENR catalysis in quasicrystals based on localized anharmonic vibrations and phasons, demonstrating increased fusion rates due to lattice vibration-induced barrier suppression.
Contribution
It introduces a novel explanation for LENR in quasicrystals involving localized anharmonic vibrations and phasons, supported by numerical solutions of driven quantum tunneling.
Findings
Fusion rate increases with modulation period and amplitude.
Lattice vibrations can drastically enhance tunneling probabilities.
Supports nuclear catalysis at specific quasicrystal sites.
Abstract
Quasicrystals (QCs) are a novel form of matter, which are neither crystalline nor amorphous. Among many surprising properties of QCs is their high catalytic activity. We propose a mechanism explaining this peculiarity based on unusual dynamics of atoms at special sites in QCs, namely, localized anharmonic vibrations (LAVs) and phasons. In the former case, one deals with a large amplitude (~ fractions of an angstrom) time-periodic oscillations of a small group of atoms around their stable positions in the lattice, known also as discrete breathers, which can be excited in regular crystals as well as in QCs. On the other hand, phasons are a specific property of QCs, which are represented by very large amplitude (~angstrom) oscillations of atoms be-tween two quasi-stable positions determined by the geometry of a QC. Large amplitude atomic motion in LAVs and phasons results in time-periodic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuasicrystal Structures and Properties · Phase-change materials and chalcogenides · Material Dynamics and Properties
