Theory of nonequilibrium crystallization and the phase diagram of active Brownian spheres

Abstract

The crystallization of hard spheres at equilibrium is perhaps the most familiar example of an entropically-driven phase transition. In recent years, it has become clear that activity can dramatically alter this order–disorder transition in unexpected ways. The theoretical description of active crystallization has remained elusive as the traditional thermodynamic arguments that shape our understanding of passive freezing are inapplicable to active systems. Here, we develop a statistical mechanical description of the one-body density field and a nonconserved order parameter field that represents local crystalline order. We develop equations of state, guided by computer simulations, describing the crystallinity field which result in shifting the order–disorder transition to higher packing fractions with increasing activity. We then leverage our recent dynamical theory of coexistence to construct the full phase diagram of active Brownian spheres, quantitatively recapitulating both the solid–fluid and liquid–gas coexistence curves along with the solid–liquid–gas triple point.

Graphical abstract: Theory of nonequilibrium crystallization and the phase diagram of active Brownian spheres

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Dec 2025
Accepted
02 Feb 2026
First published
03 Feb 2026

Soft Matter, 2026, Advance Article

Theory of nonequilibrium crystallization and the phase diagram of active Brownian spheres

D. Evans and A. K. Omar, Soft Matter, 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D5SM01196E

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