Monte Carlo simulations of two-component Coulomb gases applied in surface electrodes.
Robert Paul Salazar RomeroCamilo Bayona-RoaGabriel TéllezPublished in: Journal of physics. Condensed matter : an Institute of Physics journal (2022)
In this work, we study the gapped surface electrode (SE), a planar system composed of two-conductor flat regions at different potentials with a gapGbetween both sheets. The computation of the electric field and the surface charge density requires solving Laplace's equation subjected to Dirichlet conditions (on the electrodes) and Neumann boundary conditions over the gap. In this document, the gapless surface electrode is modeled as a two-dimensional classical Coulomb gas having punctual charges + q and - q on the inner and outer electrodes, respectively, interacting with an inverse power law 1/ r -potential. The coupling parameter Γ between particles inversely depends on temperature and is proportional to q 2 . Precisely, the density charge arises from the equilibrium states via Monte Carlo (MC) simulations. We focus on the coupling and the gap geometry effect. Mainly on the distribution of particles in the circular and the harmonically-deformed gapped SE. MC simulations differ from electrostatics in the strong coupling regime. The electrostatic approximation and the MC simulations agree in the weak coupling regime where the system behaves as two interacting ionic fluids. That means that temperature is crucial in finite-size versions of the gapped SE where the density charge cannot be assumed fully continuous as the coupling among particles increases. Numerical comparisons are addressed against analytical descriptions based on an electric vector potential approach, finding good agreement.