Evidence for multiple Liquid-liquid phase transitions in carbon, and the Friedel-ordering of its liquid state
M. W. C. Dharma-wardana, Dennis D. Klug (NRC-Canada)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced DFT simulations to reveal multiple liquid-liquid phase transitions in carbon, driven by Friedel oscillations, with implications for astrophysics, fusion, and material science.
Contribution
It demonstrates that liquid carbon exhibits multiple phase transitions linked to Friedel oscillations, challenging previous notions of its phase behavior and highlighting the role of long-range order.
Findings
Multiple liquid-liquid transitions linked to coordination changes.
Transitions are sensitive to exchange-correlation functionals.
Friedel oscillations drive the structural ordering in liquid carbon.
Abstract
Carbon, the fourth most abundant element in the Universe forms a metallic fluid with transient covalent bonds on melting. Its liquid-liquid phase transitions, intensely sought using simulations had been elusive. Here we use density functional theory (DFT) simulations with up to 108 atoms using molecular dynamics, as well as one-atom DFT as implemented in the neutral pseudo-atom method where multi-atom effects are treated by ion-ion correlation functionals. Both methods use electron-electron exchange correlation functionals for electron many-body effects. Here we show using both methods, that liquid carbon displays multiple liquid-liquid transitions linked to changes in coordination number in the density range 3 g/cm, to 6 g/cm when a coordination number of 12 is reached. The transitions disappear by 4 eV in temperature. The calculated pressures and transition densities…
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