Effective dynamic constants for nonequilibrium third-principles simulations
Mauro Pulzone, I\~nigo Robredo-Magro, Jorge \'I\~niguez-Gonz\'alez

TL;DR
This paper presents a protocol for calculating temperature-dependent inertial and damping constants in nonequilibrium simulations of ferroelectric materials, enhancing the understanding of their dynamic behavior.
Contribution
It introduces a systematic method to compute effective dynamic constants for nonequilibrium third-principles simulations, specifically applied to ferroelectric PbTiO₃.
Findings
Computed temperature-dependent inertial and damping coefficients for PbTiO₃.
The protocol is adaptable to other materials and conditions.
Results challenge some common assumptions in ferroelectric dynamics literature.
Abstract
Computational studies of the thermodynamic properties of materials at the mesoscopic and macroscopic scales -- involving lengths and times of at least m and s, respectively -- rely on a coarse-graining approximation such that only a few relevant collective variables are treated explicitly. Those variables typically take the form of fields defined everywhere in space or macroscopic quantities when spatial inhomogeneities can be treated implicitly. The free energy is usually expressed as a Landau-like potential whose temperature-dependent minima track stable states, characteristic equilibrium fluctuations being implicitly accounted for. Further, the response of the system to external perturbations, and its relaxation toward thermal equilibrium, are described in terms of simple equations of motion governed by effective inertial and viscous-damping constants. There is considerable…
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