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arxiv: 2607.01009 · v1 · pith:7CO4FGY5new · submitted 2026-07-01 · ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech · cond-mat.soft

Phase diagram of a double-occupancy cell model of a fluid with Curie-Weiss interaction

Pith reviewed 2026-07-02 04:36 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification ❄️ cond-mat.stat-mech cond-mat.soft
keywords double-occupancy cell modelCurie-Weiss interactionphase diagramBlume-Capel modelcritical pointstricritical pointtriple pointfluid coexistence
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The pith

A minimal double-occupancy fluid model with local repulsion and global attraction produces up to three coexisting phases and multiple critical points.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper maps a simple cell model allowing at most two particles per site, with short-range repulsion and infinite-range attraction, onto the Blume-Capel model on a complete graph. Analysis in the grand-canonical ensemble then shows that the ratio of repulsion to attraction strength controls the appearance of one or two critical points, a tricritical point, or a triple point. When repulsion is strong enough the system supports three distinct fluid densities, producing both ordinary gas-liquid and liquid-liquid coexistence. A sympathetic reader cares because the construction demonstrates that these complex features require only the competition between occupancy restriction and mean-field attraction, without additional interaction terms.

Core claim

The model is isomorphic to the Blume-Capel model on a complete graph. Depending on the ratio of local repulsive to global attractive interactions, its phase diagram contains regimes with a single critical point, two distinct critical points, tricritical behavior, or a triple point. Sufficiently strong repulsion yields three fluid phases of different densities and therefore both gas-liquid and liquid-liquid coexistence; the locations of all special points are located and the corresponding diagrams are constructed.

What carries the argument

Double-occupancy cell model with Curie-Weiss interaction, mapped by spin-to-occupancy transformation to the Blume-Capel model on a complete graph; the mapping converts the grand-canonical partition function into a solvable mean-field problem whose free energy is minimized with respect to density.

If this is right

  • The phase diagram topology changes qualitatively with the single control parameter that sets the ratio of local repulsion to long-range attraction.
  • Three distinct fluid phases appear once repulsion exceeds a threshold value, producing both gas-liquid and liquid-liquid first-order lines that meet at a triple point.
  • Critical and tricritical points can be located by solving the stationarity conditions of the mapped free-energy functional.
  • The same minimal ingredients suffice to generate both ordinary and liquid-liquid transitions without requiring explicit three-body forces.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Because the complete-graph limit suppresses spatial fluctuations, finite-dimensional versions of the model may shift or eliminate some of the higher-order critical points.
  • The occupancy restriction used here is formally identical to a hard-core constraint on nearest-neighbor pairs, suggesting the phase structure could appear in lattice models of associating fluids.
  • The analytic location of the triple point supplies a concrete benchmark that could be checked by direct enumeration on small complete graphs.

Load-bearing premise

The model on the complete graph can be treated exactly by the mean-field free-energy minimization that follows from the Blume-Capel isomorphism.

What would settle it

Monte Carlo simulation of the same occupancy rules on a three-dimensional lattice that finds no liquid-liquid coexistence line for parameter values where the complete-graph calculation predicts a triple point.

read the original abstract

A double-occupancy cell model of a fluid with Curie-Weiss interaction is studied. First, we show that the model is isomorphic to the Blume-Capel model on a complete graph through a simple transformation from spin to occupancy variables. We then investigate its phase behavior within the grand-canonical ensemble using a combination of analytical and numerical methods. Despite its simplicity, the model exhibits a remarkably rich thermodynamic behavior depending on the ratio between the local repulsive and global attractive interactions. We identify regimes characterized by a single critical point, two distinct critical points, tricritical behavior, and triple-point formation. For sufficiently strong repulsion, the system possesses three fluid phases of different densities, leading to both gas-liquid and liquid-liquid coexistence. The locations of the critical, tricritical, and triple points are determined, and the corresponding phase diagrams are constructed. These results demonstrate that the competition between double-occupancy repulsion and long-range attraction is sufficient to generate complex phase behavior in a minimal multiple-occupancy lattice-gas model.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper introduces a double-occupancy cell model of a fluid with Curie-Weiss (infinite-range) interactions. It first establishes an isomorphism to the Blume-Capel model on the complete graph via a transformation between occupancy variables {0,1,2} and spin variables {-1,0,1}. Using analytic and numerical methods in the grand-canonical ensemble, the authors map out the phase diagram as a function of the ratio between local repulsion and global attraction, identifying regimes with one critical point, two critical points, tricritical points, triple points, and three coexisting fluid phases of different densities when repulsion is strong.

Significance. If the central mapping is exact and the subsequent calculations are correct, the work shows that a minimal lattice-gas model with only local double-occupancy repulsion and long-range attraction is sufficient to produce multiple fluid phases and multicritical behavior. This is of interest for understanding liquid-liquid coexistence in simple fluids and provides a solvable benchmark for more complex models.

major comments (2)
  1. [mapping to Blume-Capel model] The isomorphism to the Blume-Capel model (introduced immediately after the model definition) is load-bearing for every subsequent result. The transformation must be shown to map the grand-canonical weights exactly, including the fugacity factor e^{βμ n_i} for n_i = 0,1,2, without omitted Jacobians or residual constraints. Any mismatch would shift or eliminate the reported locations of the two critical points, tricritical point, and triple point.
  2. [phase behavior analysis] The phase-diagram construction (analytic mean-field plus numerics) relies on the mapped Blume-Capel Hamiltonian being free of extra terms. The paper should explicitly verify that the chemical-potential term becomes the correct linear field in the spin representation and that the partition function is identical (up to an overall factor independent of the order parameters).
minor comments (2)
  1. Notation for the ratio of repulsive to attractive couplings should be defined once and used consistently in all figures and equations.
  2. Figure captions for the phase diagrams should state the ensemble (grand-canonical) and the numerical method used to locate the coexistence lines.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for the careful reading and for highlighting the importance of an explicit verification of the mapping. We agree that the isomorphism is central and will revise the manuscript to provide a fully detailed derivation of the grand-canonical equivalence, including the fugacity mapping and partition-function identity.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [mapping to Blume-Capel model] The isomorphism to the Blume-Capel model (introduced immediately after the model definition) is load-bearing for every subsequent result. The transformation must be shown to map the grand-canonical weights exactly, including the fugacity factor e^{βμ n_i} for n_i = 0,1,2, without omitted Jacobians or residual constraints. Any mismatch would shift or eliminate the reported locations of the two critical points, tricritical point, and triple point.

    Authors: We agree that the mapping requires an explicit, step-by-step demonstration. The manuscript introduces the bijection n_i = s_i + 1 (s_i ∈ {-1,0,1} ↔ n_i ∈ {0,1,2}) and states the resulting Blume-Capel equivalence. In the revision we will add a dedicated subsection (or appendix) that writes the grand partition function in the occupancy representation, substitutes the transformation, and shows that the term ∏_i e^{βμ n_i} becomes exactly ∏_i e^{β h s_i} times an overall constant factor independent of the order parameters. Because the map is a discrete bijection on a finite state space per site, no Jacobian appears. The interaction term likewise maps without remainder. This will confirm that the locations of the critical, tricritical, and triple points are unaffected. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [phase behavior analysis] The phase-diagram construction (analytic mean-field plus numerics) relies on the mapped Blume-Capel Hamiltonian being free of extra terms. The paper should explicitly verify that the chemical-potential term becomes the correct linear field in the spin representation and that the partition function is identical (up to an overall factor independent of the order parameters).

    Authors: This point is addressed by the same explicit derivation described above. We will insert the verification that the chemical-potential contribution maps precisely to the linear field h s_i (plus a constant) and that the full grand partition function in the two representations differs only by a multiplicative factor independent of the magnetization and quadrupole moment. With this addition the analytic mean-field equations and the numerical results remain rigorously justified on the mapped model. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No circularity; isomorphism presented as independently shown before phase analysis

full rationale

The paper states it first shows the isomorphism to the Blume-Capel model via a transformation from occupancy to spin variables, then proceeds to analyze phase behavior with analytical and numerical methods on the mapped model. No step reduces a claimed prediction or central result to a fitted parameter, self-citation chain, or definitional renaming. The mapping is asserted as derivable rather than smuggled via prior self-work, and the reported multicritical points follow from subsequent calculations on the transformed Hamiltonian. The derivation chain is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks with no load-bearing reduction to its own inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

1 free parameters · 1 axioms · 0 invented entities

The central claim rests on the validity of the isomorphism to the Blume-Capel model and the assumption that varying the single interaction ratio is sufficient to classify all thermodynamic regimes.

free parameters (1)
  • ratio of local repulsive to global attractive interactions
    Phase behavior is classified by varying this ratio; no specific fitted values are given in the abstract.
axioms (1)
  • domain assumption The double-occupancy cell model is isomorphic to the Blume-Capel model on a complete graph via a simple spin-to-occupancy transformation
    This mapping is stated as the starting point that enables the phase-diagram analysis.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5737 in / 1390 out tokens · 32802 ms · 2026-07-02T04:36:55.029255+00:00 · methodology

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Reference graph

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