Walking with the atoms in a chemical bond : A perspective using quantum phase transition
Sabre Kais

TL;DR
This paper explores the concept of quantum phase transitions in finite systems, especially in ultracold atomic systems, and examines chemical bond formation and dissociation as quantum phase transitions.
Contribution
It provides a perspective on chemical processes at ultracold temperatures as quantum phase transitions, emphasizing the role of finite size scaling in understanding these phenomena.
Findings
Quantum phase transitions can occur in finite systems.
Experimental evidence of quantum phase transition in a single trapped ion.
Finite size scaling helps analyze critical parameters in ultracold systems.
Abstract
Classical phase transitions, like solid-liquid-gas or order-disorder spin magnetic phases, are all driven by thermal energy fluctuations by varying the temperature. On the other hand, quantum phase transitions happen at absolute zero temperature with quantum fluctuations causing the ground state energy to show abrupt changes as one varies the system parameters like electron density, pressure, disorder, or external magnetic field. Phase transitions happen at critical values of the controlling parameters, such as the critical temperature in classical phase transitions, and system critical parameters in the quantum case. However, true criticality happens only at the thermodynamic limit, when the number of particles goes to infinity with constant density. To perform the calculations for the critical parameters, finite size scaling approach was developed to extrapolate information from a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCold Atom Physics and Bose-Einstein Condensates · Quantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
