Bulk and Surface Properties of Dipolar Fluids
B.Groh, S.Dietrich

TL;DR
This paper uses density-functional theory to analyze phase diagrams, orientational order, and structural properties of dipolar fluids, revealing stable ferromagnetic phases, complex magnetization structures, and surface phenomena.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical analysis of dipolar fluids, including phase behavior, magnetization structures, and surface effects, with new insights into shape-dependent ordering.
Findings
Existence of a stable ferromagnetic fluid phase for strong dipoles
Vortex-like magnetization structures with defects in cubic samples
Surface-induced orientational order near the liquid-gas interface
Abstract
Based on density-functional theory we analyze the full phase diagram, the occurrence of long-ranged orientational order, and the structural properties of dipolar fluids. As a model system we consider the Stockmayer fluid that consists of spherical particles interacting via a Lennard-Jones potential plus dipolar forces. For sufficiently strong dipole moments one finds a region where a fluid phase with long-ranged orientational order is stable. For all sample shapes with the exception of a long thin needle this phase exhibits a spatially inhomogeneous magnetization which depends on the actual shape. We determine the details of the magnetization structure in a cubic sample in the absence and in the presence of an external magnetic field. One obtains a vortexlike structure with an escape of the magnetization into the axis direction near the vortex axis and two point defects where the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCharacterization and Applications of Magnetic Nanoparticles · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
