Triangular – occupational

The primitive triangular lattice is perhaps the simplest example of a geometrically frustrated lattice. Using the forward Monte Carlo method, the Hamiltonian

\[E=-J\sum_{\langle i,j\rangle}\sigma_i\sigma_j\]

is used to describe the nearest neighbor interactions where the interaction strength is less than zero (\(J<0\)). The occupancy parameter \(\sigma\) indicates either the presence of an atom (\(\sigma=+1\)) or vacancy (\(\sigma=-1\)).

Triangular-occupational
Example of triangular lattice with occupational disorder

The occupancy-pair correlations of an \(16\times16\times16\) supercell are obtained from a forward Monte Carlo simulation. The first nearest neighbors are clearly negatively correlated while the second are positively correlated. In the case of third nearest neighbors, the correlation is also negative.

Triangular-occupational correlations
Occupancy-pair correlations

The diffuse scattering intensity is calculated over a range of -2 to 2 in each \(h\)-, \(k\)-, and \(l\)-direction with a bin size of 0.02 in each dimension. Averaging is done over 20 independent forward Monte Carlo simulations to improve the statistics.

Triangular-magnetic intensity
Diffuse scattering intensity

RMC refinement

Setup, run, and analyze a refinement with occupational disorder.

Crystal tab

Create a supercell for nonmagnetic refinement.

Triangular GUI crystal tab
Crystal tab

Intensity tab

Preprocess intensity obtained from forward Monte Carlo.

Triangular GUI intensity tab
Intensity tab

Refinement tab

Perform the refinement.

Triangular GUI refinement tab
Refinement tab

Correlations tab

Calculate three-dimensional occupancy-pair correlations.

Triangular GUI correlations tab
Correlations tab

Recalculation tab

Recalculate the intensity over the initial reciprocal space volume.

Triangular GUI recalculation tab
Recalculation tab