Short-range order

Silicon in the short-range order (SRO) regime: tight first-neighbour shell and well-defined bond angles, but rapid loss of correlation beyond the nearest shell.

Parameters

from ase.build import bulk
import tricor as tc

atoms = bulk("Si", "diamond", a=5.431)
shell_target = tc.CoordinationShellTarget.from_atoms(atoms, phi_num_bins=90)

cell = tc.Supercell.from_atoms(
    atoms,
    cell_dim_angstroms=(40, 40, 40),
    r_max=10, r_step=0.1, phi_num_bins=90,
    rng_seed=42,
)
cell.generate(
    shell_target,
    num_steps=180,
    grain_size=8.0,
    bond_weight=1.5,
    angle_weight=0.5,
    repulsion_weight=1.8,
    hard_core_scale=0.91,
    nonbond_push_scale=0.60,
    displacement_sigma=0.06,
)

Relaxation trajectory

Interactive 3D viewer of the shell-relaxation trajectory (40 × 40 × 40 Å cell). Drag to rotate, scroll to zoom. Controls below the canvas play, scrub, and change playback speed.

g3 distribution

Measured from the final (post-relaxation) atoms. The heatmap is the reduced three-body density in units of the uniform random reference, where white = 1.0, blue = depleted, red = enhanced. The lower panel shows the pair profile g(r); the shaded amber band marks the first-neighbour shell used as the root-bond integration window for the g3 slice. For silicon there is a single Si-Si-Si triplet channel.