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Dive into the research topics where György Tegze is active.

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Featured researches published by György Tegze.


Advances in Physics | 2012

Phase-field-crystal models for condensed matter dynamics on atomic length and diffusive time scales: an overview

Heike Emmerich; Hartmut Löwen; Raphael Wittkowski; Thomas Gruhn; Gyula I. Tóth; György Tegze; László Gránásy

Here, we review the basic concepts and applications of the phase-field-crystal (PFC) method, which is one of the latest simulation methodologies in materials science for problems, where atomic- and microscales are tightly coupled. The PFC method operates on atomic length and diffusive time scales, and thus constitutes a computationally efficient alternative to molecular simulation methods. Its intense development in materials science started fairly recently following the work by Elder et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 (2002), p. 245701]. Since these initial studies, dynamical density functional theory and thermodynamic concepts have been linked to the PFC approach to serve as further theoretical fundamentals for the latter. In this review, we summarize these methodological development steps as well as the most important applications of the PFC method with a special focus on the interaction of development steps taken in hard and soft matter physics, respectively. Doing so, we hope to present todays state of the art in PFC modelling as well as the potential, which might still arise from this method in physics and materials science in the nearby future.


Journal of Computational Physics | 2009

Advanced operator splitting-based semi-implicit spectral method to solve the binary phase-field crystal equations with variable coefficients

György Tegze; Gurvinder Bansel; Gyula I. Tóth; Tamás Pusztai; Z. Fan; László Gránásy

We present an efficient method to solve numerically the equations of dissipative dynamics of the binary phase-field crystal model proposed by Elder et al. [K.R. Elder, M. Katakowski, M. Haataja, M. Grant, Phys. Rev. B 75 (2007) 064107] characterized by variable coefficients. Using the operator splitting method, the problem has been decomposed into sub-problems that can be solved more efficiently. A combination of non-trivial splitting with spectral semi-implicit solution leads to sets of algebraic equations of diagonal matrix form. Extensive testing of the method has been carried out to find the optimum balance among errors associated with time integration, spatial discretization, and splitting. We show that our method speeds up the computations by orders of magnitude relative to the conventional explicit finite difference scheme, while the costs of the pointwise implicit solution per timestep remains low. Also we show that due to its numerical dissipation, finite differencing can not compete with spectral differencing in terms of accuracy. In addition, we demonstrate that our method can efficiently be parallelized for distributed memory systems, where an excellent scalability with the number of CPUs is observed.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2010

Polymorphism, crystal nucleation and growth in the phase-field crystal model in 2D and 3D

Gyula I. Tóth; György Tegze; Tamás Pusztai; Gergely Tóth; László Gránásy

We apply a simple dynamical density functional theory, the phase-field crystal (PFC) model of overdamped conservative dynamics, to address polymorphism, crystal nucleation, and crystal growth in the diffusion-controlled limit. We refine the phase diagram for 3D, and determine the line free energy in 2D and the height of the nucleation barrier in 2D and 3D for homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation by solving the respective Euler-Lagrange (EL) equations. We demonstrate that, in the PFC model, the body-centered cubic (bcc), the face-centered cubic (fcc), and the hexagonal close-packed structures (hcp) compete, while the simple cubic structure is unstable, and that phase preference can be tuned by changing the model parameters: close to the critical point the bcc structure is stable, while far from the critical point the fcc prevails, with an hcp stability domain in between. We note that with increasing distance from the critical point the equilibrium shapes vary from the sphere to specific faceted shapes: rhombic dodecahedron (bcc), truncated octahedron (fcc), and hexagonal prism (hcp). Solving the equation of motion of the PFC model supplied with conserved noise, solidification starts with the nucleation of an amorphous precursor phase, into which the stable crystalline phase nucleates. The growth rate is found to be time dependent and anisotropic; this anisotropy depends on the driving force. We show that due to the diffusion-controlled growth mechanism, which is especially relevant for crystal aggregation in colloidal systems, dendritic growth structures evolve in large-scale isothermal single-component PFC simulations. An oscillatory effective pair potential resembling those for model glass formers has been evaluated from structural data of the amorphous phase obtained by instantaneous quenching. Finally, we present results for eutectic solidification in a binary PFC model.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2004

Kinetics of solid hydrate formation by carbon dioxide: Phase field theory of hydrate nucleation and magnetic resonance imaging

Bjørn Kvamme; Arne Graue; E. Aspenes; Tatiana Kuznetsova; László Gránásy; Gyula I. Tóth; Tamás Pusztai; György Tegze

In the course of developing a general kinetic model of hydrate formation/reaction that can be used to establish/optimize technologies for the exploitation of hydrate reservoirs, two aspects of CO2 hydrate formation have been studied. (i) We developed a phase field theory for describing the nucleation of CO2 hydrate in aqueous solutions. The accuracy of the model has been demonstrated on the hard-sphere model system, for which all information needed to calculate the height of the nucleation barrier is known accurately. It has been shown that the phase field theory is considerably more accurate than the sharp-interface droplet model of the classical nucleation theory. Starting from realistic estimates for the thermodynamic and interfacial properties, we have shown that under typical conditions of CO2 formation, the size of the critical fluctuations (nuclei) is comparable to the interface thickness, implying that the droplet model should be rather inaccurate. Indeed the phase field theory predicts considerably smaller height for the nucleation barrier than the classical approach. (ii) In order to provide accurate transformation rates to test the kinetic model under development, we applied magnetic resonance imaging to monitor hydrate phase transitions in porous media under realistic conditions. The mechanism of natural gas hydrate conversion to CO2-hydrate implies storage potential for CO2 in natural gas hydrate reservoirs, with the additional benefit of methane production. We present the transformation rates for the relevant processes (hydrate formation, dissociation and recovery).


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2006

Multiscale approach to CO2 hydrate formation in aqueous solution: Phase field theory and molecular dynamics. Nucleation and growth

György Tegze; Tamás Pusztai; Gyula I. Tóth; László Gránásy; Atle Svandal; T. Buanes; Tatyana Kuznetsova; Bjørn Kvamme

A phase field theory with model parameters evaluated from atomistic simulations/experiments is applied to predict the nucleation and growth rates of solid CO(2) hydrate in aqueous solutions under conditions typical to underwater natural gas hydrate reservoirs. It is shown that under practical conditions a homogeneous nucleation of the hydrate phase can be ruled out. The growth rate of CO(2) hydrate dendrites has been determined from phase field simulations as a function of composition while using a physical interface thickness (0.85+/-0.07 nm) evaluated from molecular dynamics simulations. The growth rate extrapolated to realistic supersaturations is about three orders of magnitude larger than the respective experimental observation. A possible origin of the discrepancy is discussed. It is suggested that a kinetic barrier reflecting the difficulties in building the complex crystal structure is the most probable source of the deviations.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2008

Phase-field approach to polycrystalline solidification including heterogeneous and homogeneous nucleation

Tamás Pusztai; György Tegze; Gyula I. Tóth; László Környei; Gurvinder Bansel; Zhungyun Fan; László Gránásy

Advanced phase-field techniques have been applied to address various aspects of polycrystalline solidification including different modes of crystal nucleation. The height of the nucleation barrier has been determined by solving the appropriate Euler–Lagrange equations. The examples shown include the comparison of various models of homogeneous crystal nucleation with atomistic simulations for the single-component hard sphere fluid. Extending previous work for pure systems (Granasy et al 2007 Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 035703), heterogeneous nucleation in unary and binary systems is described via introducing boundary conditions that realize the desired contact angle. A quaternion representation of crystallographic orientation of the individual particles (outlined in Pusztai et al 2005 Europhys. Lett. 71 131) has been applied for modeling a broad variety of polycrystalline structures including crystal sheaves, spherulites and those built of crystals with dendritic, cubic, rhombo-dodecahedral and truncated octahedral growth morphologies. Finally, we present illustrative results for dendritic polycrystalline solidification obtained using an atomistic phase-field model.


Physical Review Letters | 2011

Amorphous Nucleation Precursor in Highly Nonequilibrium Fluids

Gyula I. Tóth; Tamás Pusztai; György Tegze; Gergely Tóth; László Gránásy

Dynamical density-functional simulations reveal structural aspects of crystal nucleation in undercooled liquids: The first appearing solid is amorphous, which promotes the nucleation of bcc crystals but suppresses the appearance of the fcc and hcp phases. These findings are associated with features of the effective interaction potential deduced from the amorphous structure.


Soft Matter | 2011

Tuning the structure of non-equilibrium soft materials by varying the thermodynamic driving force for crystal ordering

György Tegze; László Gránásy; Gyula I. Tóth; Jack F. Douglas; Tamás Pusztai

The present work explores the ubiquitous morphological changes in crystallizing systems with increasing thermodynamic driving force based on a novel dynamic density functional theory. A colloidal ‘soft’ material is chosen as a model system for our investigation since there are careful colloidal crystallization observations at a particle scale resolution for comparison, which allows for a direct verification of our simulation predictions. We particularly focus on a theoretically unanticipated, and generic, morphological transition leading to progressively irregular-shaped single crystals in both colloidal and polymeric materials with an increasing thermodynamic driving force. Our simulation method significantly extends previous ‘phase field’ simulations by incorporating a minimal description of the ‘atomic’ structure of the material, while allowing simultaneously for a description of large scale crystal growth. We discover a ‘fast’ mode of crystal growth at high driving force, suggested before in experimental colloidal crystallization studies, and find that the coupling of this crystal mode to the well-understood ‘diffusive’ or ‘slow’ crystal growth mode (giving rise to symmetric crystal growth mode and dendritic crystallization as in snowflakes by the Mullins–Sekerka instability) can greatly affect the crystal morphology at high thermodynamic driving force. In particular, an understanding of this interplay between these fast and slow crystal growth modes allows us to describe basic crystallization morphologies seen in both colloidal suspensions with increasing particle concentration and crystallizing polymer films with decreasing temperature: compact symmetric crystals, dendritic crystals, fractal-like structures, and then a return to compact symmetric single crystal growth again.


Philosophical Magazine | 2011

Phase-field crystal modelling of crystal nucleation, heteroepitaxy and patterning

László Gránásy; György Tegze; Gyula I. Tóth; Tamás Pusztai

A simple dynamical density functional theory, the phase-field crystal (PFC) model, was used to describe homogeneous and heterogeneous crystal nucleation in two-dimensional (2D) monodisperse colloidal systems and crystal nucleation in highly compressed Fe liquid. External periodic potentials were used to approximate inert crystalline substrates in addressing heterogeneous nucleation. In agreement with experiments in 2D colloids, the PFC model predicts that in 2D supersaturated liquids, crystalline freezing starts with homogeneous crystal nucleation without the occurrence of the hexatic phase. At extreme supersaturations, crystal nucleation happens after the appearance of an amorphous precursor both in two and three dimensions. Contrary to expectations based on the classical nucleation theory, it is shown that corners are not necessarily favourable places for crystal nucleation. Finally, it is shown that by adding external potential terms to the free energy, the PFC theory can be used to model colloid patterning experiments.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2014

Heterogeneous nucleation of/on nanoparticles: A density functional study using the phase-field crystal model

László Gránásy; Frigyes Podmaniczky; Gyula I. Tóth; György Tegze; Tamás Pusztai

Crystallization of supersaturated liquids usually starts by heterogeneous nucleation. Mounting evidence shows that even homogeneous nucleation in simple liquids takes place in two steps; first a dense amorphous precursor forms, and the crystalline phase appears via heterogeneous nucleation in/on the precursor cluster. Herein, we review recent results by a simple dynamical density functional theory, the phase-field crystal model, for (precursor-mediated) homogeneous and heterogeneous nucleation of nanocrystals. It will be shown that the mismatch between the lattice constants of the nucleating crystal and the substrate plays a decisive role in determining the contact angle and nucleation barrier, which were found to be non-monotonic functions of the lattice mismatch. Time dependent studies are essential as investigations based on equilibrium properties often cannot identify the preferred nucleation pathways. Modeling of these phenomena is essential for designing materials on the basis of controlled nucleation and/or nano-patterning.

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Gyula I. Tóth

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Tamás Pusztai

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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László Gránásy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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László Gránásy

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Jack F. Douglas

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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James A. Warren

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Tamás Börzsönyi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Frigyes Podmaniczky

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Gergely Tóth

Eötvös Loránd University

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