Optical Response Properties and Effective Charges of Warm Dense Matter Mixtures

ORAL

Abstract

Predicting the charged particle transport properties of warm dense matter/hot dense plasma mixtures is a challenge for analytical models. High accuracy ab initio methods are more computationally expensive but can provide critical insight by explicitly simulating mixtures. In this work, we use Kohn-Sham Density Functional Theory to investigate the transport properties and optical response of warm dense mixtures at varying concentrations under either conserved electronic pressure or mass density at a constant temperature. We compare options for mixing the calculated pure species properties to estimate the results of the mixtures. We find that a combination of the Drude model with the Matthiessen's rule works well for DC electron transport and low-frequency optical response. This breaks down at higher frequencies, where a volumetric mix of pure-species AC conductivities works better. We will also highlight a novel method for extracting the effective charge state and elemental conductivities from multi-atom simulations of disordered mixtures using time-dependent density functional theory.

*This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energythrough the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). Researchpresented in this article was supported by Science Campaign 4 andthe Laboratory Directed Research and Development of LANL underProject Nos. 20210233ER, 20230322ER, and 20230323ER. We gratefullyacknowledge the support of the Center for Nonlinear Studies(CNLS). This research used computing resources provided by theLANL Institutional Computing and Advanced Scientific Computingprograms. Los Alamos National Laboratory is operated by TriadNational Security, LLC, for the National Nuclear SecurityAdministration of U.S. Department of Energy (Contract No.89233218CNA000001).

Publication: Optical and transport properties of plasma mixtures from ab initio molecular dynamics, Phys. Plasmas 31, 042706 (2024); doi: 10.1063/5.0198003

Presenters

  • Alexander J White

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab

Authors

  • Alexander J White

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Vidushi Sharma

    • Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory
  • Lee A. Collins

    • Los Alamos Natl Lab
  • Galen Craven

    • Los Alamos National Laboratory