Obtaning values and plotting Lennard-Jones function
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Ugur Batir
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
Comentada: NURSAFIKA BAHIRA JULI
el 21 de En. de 2020
I need to evaluate the below function which is the Lennard-Jones function defining the van der Waals forces between atoms. The function and the plot it must give are attached. Sigma and epsilon are constants in the function. I tried to write the code for it in couple of different forms and also tried to do it in MS Excel but all of those gave a curve that resembles a saturation curve. Any help would be very appreciated.
3 comentarios
John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
In fact, your plot is identical to what I produced. What you apparently don't understand is what happens for small r. The plot axes explode. So you never see the essential shape of the curve, since you went all the way down to r=1.
Try this instead:
r=3.4:0.01:10;
Respuesta aceptada
John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
Not too much of a problem. You just need to be careful about what you are plotting.
f = @(s) (2*s.^13 - s.^7)./s;
S = linspace(.25,1,100);
plot(1./S,f(S))
grid on

3 comentarios
John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
What is not right? I would suggest that you are wrong. But feel free to explain why it is NOT right. If you cannot do so, then it just means you don't understand what was done. That you failed to generate this plot also means you fail to understand how to plot it.
The scaling on the y axis is merely a scale factor. I left out epsilon, but who cares about axis scaling? You can put that in. I chose to parameterize it in terms of a variable s=sigma/r, but again, that is irrelevant. I did those things of course since you failed to provide ANY information about what they were.
John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
Editada: John D'Errico
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
Of course, now that I know what your parameters are, I can include them, in case this makes you happy. Still trivial. Still effectively the same plot.
r = linspace(3.4,10,100);
sig = 3.4;
f = @(sig,r) 24*(2*(sig./r).^13 - (sig./r).^7)./sig;
plot(r./sig,f(sig,r))

Más respuestas (4)
Star Strider
el 19 de Abr. de 2015
I believe the information you were provided is incorrect. The equation for F actually appears to be the Lennard-Jones equation, not the van der Waals equation. Since F appears to be the integral of U w.r.t. r, and now having ‘sigma’ (I still need ‘epsilon’), this would be my approach:
U = @(e,s,r) 4*e*((s./r).^12 - (s./r).^6); % Lennard-Jones
e = 1.0; % epsilon (GUESS)
s = 3.4; % sigma
r = linspace(0.75, 2.5)*s;
U_LJ = U(e,s,r);
F_vdW = cumtrapz(U_LJ, r); % van der Waals
figure(1)
plot(r/s, U_LJ/e, '--k')
hold on
plot(r/s, (F_vdW-F_vdW(end))*s/e, '-k')
hold off
grid
axis([0.75 3 -20 4.5])
legend('Lennard-Jones \itU/\epsilon\rm', 'van der Waals \itF\sigma/\epsilon')
Subtracting the last value of ‘F_vdW’ corrects for the constant-of-integration. This produces a plot that does not exactly match the sort you posted, but is reasonably close. You will have to experiment with your equations and constants to get the correct result:

4 comentarios
Star Strider
el 27 de Feb. de 2016
My pleasure.
I am happy it helped. I would appreciate it if you would Vote for it.
NURSAFIKA BAHIRA JULI
el 21 de En. de 2020
Hye, can i run monte carlo Simulation for LJ's model?? And how?
LATEFA ALSHAMMARY
el 9 de Nov. de 2018
U = @(e,s,r) 24*(e/s)*(2*(s./r).^13 - (s./r).^7); % Lennard-Jones e = 0.0556; % epsilon (GUESS) s = 3.4; % sigma r = linspace(0.75, 2.5)*s; U_LJ = U(e,s,r); % L-J Evaluated F_vdW = gradient(U_LJ, r(2)-r(1)); % van der Waals figure(1) plot(r/s, U_LJ/e, '--k') hold on plot(r/s, -F_vdW*s/e, '-k') hold off grid axis([0.75 3 -3 5]) legend('Lennard-Jones \itU/\epsilon\rm', 'van der Waals \itF\sigma/\epsilon')
0 comentarios
algeed alshammari
el 11 de Nov. de 2018
I need code in matlab TO PLOTE Lennard-Jones PLESE
0 comentarios
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