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Formation and Properties of Astrophysical Carbonaceous Dust. I. Ab-initio Calculations of the Configuration and Binding Energies of Small Carbon Clusters

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Title Formation and Properties of Astrophysical Carbonaceous Dust. I. Ab-initio Calculations of the Configuration and Binding Energies of Small Carbon Clusters
Names Mauney, Christopher (creator)
Nardelli, Marco Buongiorno (creator)
Lazzati, Davide (creator)
Date Issued 2015-02-05 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The article is copyrighted by the American Astronomical Society and published by the Institute of Physics Publishing. It can be found at: http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X.
Abstract The binding energies of n < 100 carbon clusters are calculated using the ab initio density functional theory code
Quantum Espresso. Carbon cluster geometries are determined using several levels of classical techniques and further
refined using density functional theory. The resulting energies are used to compute the work of cluster formation
and the nucleation rate in a saturated, hydrogen-poor carbon gas. Compared to classical calculations that adopt the
capillary approximation, we find that nucleation of carbon clusters is enhanced at low temperatures and depressed
at high temperatures. This difference is ascribed to the different behavior of the critical cluster size. We find that
the critical cluster size is at n = 27 or n = 8 for a broad range of temperatures and saturations, instead of being
a smooth function of such parameters. The results of our calculations can be used to follow carbonaceous cluster/grain formation, stability, and growth in hydrogen-poor environments, such as the inner layers of core-collapse
supernovae and supernova remnants.
Genre Article
Topic dust
Identifier Mauney, C., Nardelli, M. B., & Lazzati, D. (2015). Formation and properties of astrophysical carbonaceous dust. I. ab-initio calculations of the configuration and binding energies of small carbon clusters. Astrophysical Journal, 800(1), 30. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/800/1/30

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