Proton strings and rings in atypical nucleation of ferroelectricity in ice
Jorge Lasave, Sergio Koval, Alessandro Laio, and Erio Tosatti

TL;DR
This paper models the microscopic mechanism of ferroelectricity in doped ice, revealing proton strings and rings as key features of the nucleation process and explaining experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a lattice model with dipolar interactions and frustration, demonstrating how proton vacancies induce ferroelectric order via string formation.
Findings
Proton vacancies generate linear proton rings and strings.
The model reproduces the FE order fraction dependence on dopant concentration.
A first-order phase transition to FE order is observed in simulations.
Abstract
Ordinary ice has a proton-disordered phase which is kinetically metastable, unable to reach, spontaneously, the ferroelectric (FE) ground state at low temperature where a residual Pauling entropy persists. Upon light doping with KOH at low temperature, the transition to FE ice takes place, but its microscopic mechanism still needs clarification. We introduce a lattice model based on dipolar interactions plus a competing, frustrating term that enforces the ice rule (IR). In the absence of IR-breaking defects, standard Monte Carlo (MC) simulation leaves this ice model stuck in a state of disordered proton ring configurations with the correct Pauling entropy. A replica exchange accelerated MC sampling strategy succeeds, without open path moves, interfaces, or off-lattice configurations, in equilibrating this defect-free ice, reaching its low-temperature FE order through a well-defined…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMethane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Material Dynamics and Properties · Theoretical and Computational Physics
