Abstract
The quasiharmonic approximation (QHA) in combination with density-functional theory is the main computational method used to calculate thermodynamic properties under arbitrary temperature and pressure conditions. QHA can predict thermodynamic phase diagrams, elastic properties, and thermal conductivities, all of which are important in various fields of knowledge. The main drawback of QHA is that it makes spurious predictions for the volume and other properties in the high temperature limit due to its approximate treatment of anharmonicity. In this work, we propose a simple extension to QHA that fixes this problem. Our approach is based on four ingredients: i) the calculation of the n-th order force constants using randomly displaced configurations and regularized regression, ii) the calculation of temperature-dependent effective harmonic frequencies with self-consistent harmonic approximation (SCHA), iii) Allen's quasiparticle (QP) theory, which allows the calculation of the anharmonic entropy from the effective frequencies, and iv) a simple Debye-like numerical model that enables the calculation of all other thermodynamic properties from the QP entropies. The proposed method is conceptually simple, with a computational complexity similar to QHA, and allows incorporating anharmonic effects to any order. The predictions of the new method coincide with QHA in the low-temperature limit and eliminate the QHA blowout at high temperature, recovering the experimentally observed behavior of all thermodynamic properties tested. The performance of our new method is demonstrated by calculating the thermodynamic properties of geologically relevant minerals MgO and CaO. We expect this new method to be an important tool in geochemistry and materials discovery.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information: Thermodynamics of Solids Including Anharmonicity Using Quasiparticle Theory
Description
Supporting figures and tables for the main paper.
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