In statistical mechanics, the cluster expansion (also called the high temperature expansion or hopping expansion) is a power series expansion of the partition function of a statistical field theory around a model that is a union of non-interacting 0-dimensional field theories. Cluster expansions originated in the work of . Unlike the usual perturbation expansion which usually leads to a divergent asymptotic series, the cluster expansion may converge within a non-trivial region, in particular when the interaction is small and short-ranged.
The cluster expansion coefficients are calculated by intricate combinatorial counting. See for a tutorial review.
In statistical mechanics, the properties of a system of noninteracting particles are described using thepartition function. For N noninteracting particles, the system is described by the Hamiltonian
.H0=\sum
N | |
i |
| |||||||
2m |
.Z0=
1 | |
N!h3N |
\int\prodid\vec{p}i d\vec{r}i\exp\left\{-\betaH0(\{ri,p
|
\left(
2\pim | |
\beta |
| ||||
\right) |
.
.F0=-kBTlnZ0
When the particles of the system interact, an exact calculation of the partition function is usually not possible. For low density, the interactions can be approximated with a sum of two-particle potentials:
. U\left(\{ri\}\right)=
N | |
\sum | |
i=1,i<j |
u2(|\vec{r}i-\vec{r}j|)=
N | |
\sum | |
i=1,i<j |
u2(rij).
.Z=Z0 Q
F=F0-kBTln\left(Q\right)
Q= | 1 |
VN |
\int\prodid\vec{r}i\exp\left\{ -\beta
N | |
\sum | |
i=1,i<j |
u2(rij) \right\}.
The configuration integral
Q
u2(r)
Q
\exp\left\{ -\beta\sum1\leu2(rij) \right\}=\prod1\le\exp\left\{-\betau2(rij)\right\}
fij
\exp\left\{-\betau2(rij)\right\}=1+fij
.Q=
1 | |
VN |
\int\prodid\vec{r}i \prod1\le\left(1+fij\right)
fij
\prod1\le\left(1+fij\right)= 1+\sum1\le fij
N | |
+\sum | |
1\lei<j\leN,1\lem<n\leN\atopi<m or (i=m and j<n) |
fij fmn+ …
Each term must appear only once. With this expansion it is possible to find terms of different order, in terms of the number of particles that are involved. The first term is the non-interaction term (corresponding to no interactions amongst particles), the second term corresponds to the two-particle interactions, the third to the two-particle interactions amongst 4 (not necessarily distinct) particles, and so on. This physical interpretation is the reason this expansion is called the cluster expansion: the sum can be rearranged so that each term represents the interactions within clusters of a certain number of particles.
Substituting the expansion of the product back into the expression for the configuration integral results in a series expansion for
Q
. Q=1+ | N |
V |
\alpha1+
N (N-1) | |
2 V2 |
\alpha2+ … .
PV=NkBT\left(1+
N | |
V |
B2(T)+
N2 | |
V2 |
B3(T)+
N3 | |
V3 |
B4(T)+ … \right)
Bi(T)
B2(T)
B3(T)
This can be applied further to mixtures of gases and liquid solutions.