By University of Michigan August 10, 2025

Collected at: https://scitechdaily.com/what-happens-when-matter-refuses-to-follow-the-rules-quasicrystals/

For decades, quasicrystals — strange solids that blur the line between crystal and glass — have puzzled scientists. Unlike ordinary crystals, their atomic patterns never repeat, yet they remain highly ordered.

Now, researchers using the first-ever quantum-mechanical simulations of these materials have uncovered why they exist: they are fundamentally stable, not fleeting accidents of rapid cooling. The breakthrough resolves a 40-year-old scientific mystery and opens the door to engineering materials with unusual, rule-breaking properties.

Quasicrystals: A Curious State Between Crystal and Glass

A strange and rare form of matter that falls between crystal and glass may actually be the most stable structure for certain atomic combinations, according to research from the University of Michigan.

This conclusion comes from the first quantum-mechanical simulations ever performed on quasicrystals, a kind of solid once believed to be impossible. Like crystals, quasicrystals have atoms arranged in a lattice, but their patterns never repeat the way they do in conventional crystals. The new simulation approach shows that, just like crystals, quasicrystals are inherently stable, even though they share similarities with disordered materials such as glass, which typically form when molten substances are cooled too quickly.

Quasicrystal Grain
Single grains of a scandium-zinc quasicrystal have 12 pentagonal faces. Credit: Yamada et al. (2016). IUCrJ

Why Do Quasicrystals Even Exist?

“We need to know how to arrange atoms into specific structures if we want to design materials with desired properties,” said Wenhao Sun, the Dow Early Career Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, and the corresponding author of the paper published today in Nature Physics. “Quasicrystals have forced us to rethink how and why certain materials can form. Until our study, it was unclear to scientists why they existed.”

Quasicrystals first startled the scientific world in 1984 when Israeli researcher Daniel Shechtman observed them while working with aluminum and manganese alloys. He discovered that some of the atoms formed an icosahedral structure, resembling a cluster of 20-sided dice connected at their faces. This structure gave the material five-fold symmetry—meaning it looked identical from five different perspectives—something once thought to be impossible in solid matter.

Quasicrystal Scoop Sizes
To calculate the stability of a solid whose atoms don’t repeat in a sequence, the researchers simulated scoops of quasicrystal that were randomly sampled out of a larger block. The energy within each nanoparticle can be calculated using quantum mechanics because the particle has defined boundaries. Repeating the calculations over a range of scoop sizes allows the researchers to extrapolate their energy calculations to the bulk quasicrystal. Credit: Woohyeon Baek, Sun Research Group, University of Michigan

From Controversy to Nobel Recognition

Scientists at the time thought that the atoms inside crystals could only be arranged in sequences repeating in each direction, but five-fold symmetry precluded such patterns. Shechtman initially faced intense scrutiny for suggesting the impossible, but other labs later produced their own quasicrystals and found them in billion-year-old meteorites.

Shechtman eventually earned the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2011 for his discovery, but scientists still couldn’t answer fundamental questions on how quasicrystals formed. The roadblock was that density-functional theory—the quantum-mechanical method for calculating a crystal’s stability—relies on patterns that infinitely repeat in a sequence, which quasicrystals lack.

“The first step to understanding a material is knowing what makes it stable, but it has been hard to tell how quasicrystals were stabilized,” said Woohyeon Baek, a U-M doctoral student in materials science and engineering and the study’s first author.

The atoms in any given material usually arrange into crystals so that the chemical bonds achieve the lowest possible energy. Scientists call such structures enthalpy-stabilized crystals. But other materials form because they have high entropy, meaning there are a lot of different ways for its atoms to be arranged or vibrate.

University of Michigan Quasicrystal Research Group
A portrait of the University of Michigan research team. Each researcher holds a model of a geometry that can’t fit within conventional crystals. Pictured from left to right are: Vikram Gavini, a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and engineering; Sambit Das, an assistant research scientist in mechanical engineering; Woohyeon Baek, a doctoral student in materials science and engineering; Wenhao Sun, the Dow Early Career Assistant Professor of Materials Science and Engineering; and Shibo Tan, a doctoral student in materials science and engineering. Credit: Marcin Szczepanski, Michigan Engineering

Quasicrystals: Order Without Repetition

Glass is one example of an entropy-stabilized solid. It forms when melted silica quickly cools, flash-freezing the atoms into a patternless form. But if the cooling rates slow, or a base is added to heated silica, the atoms can arrange into quartz crystals—the preferred, lowest energy state at room temperature. Quasicrystals are a puzzling intermediate between glass and crystal. They have locally ordered atomic arrangements like crystals, but like glass, they do not form long-range, repeating patterns.

To determine if quasicrystals are enthalpy- or entropy-stabilized, the researcher’s method scoops out smaller nanoparticles from a larger simulated block of quasicrystal. The researchers then calculate the total energy in each nanoparticle, which doesn’t require an infinite sequence because the particle has defined boundaries.

Revealing the Secret Energies of Quasicrystals

Since the energy in a nanoparticle is related to its volume and surface area, repeating the calculations for nanoparticles of increasing sizes allows the researchers to extrapolate the total energy inside a larger block of quasicrystal. With this method, the researchers discovered that two well-studied quasicrystals are enthalpy-stabilized. One is an alloy of scandium and zinc, the other of ytterbium and cadmium.

The most accurate estimates of quasicrystal energy require the largest particles possible, but scaling up the nanoparticles is difficult with standard algorithms. For nanoparticles with only hundreds of atoms, doubling the atoms increases the computing time eightfold. But the researchers found a solution for the computing bottleneck, too.

Accelerating the Future of Materials Research

“In conventional algorithms, every computer processor needs to communicate with one another, but our algorithm is up to 100 times faster because only the neighboring processors communicate, and we effectively use GPU acceleration in supercomputers,” said study co-author Vikram Gavini, a U-M professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and engineering.

“We can now simulate glass and amorphous materials, interfaces between different crystals, as well as crystal defects that can enable quantum computing bits.”

Reference: “Quasicrystal stability and nucleation kinetics from density functional theory” by Woohyeon Baek, Sambit Das, Shibo Tan, Vikram Gavini and Wenhao Sun, 13 June 2025, Nature Physics.
DOI: 10.1038/s41567-025-02925-6

The research is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy and relied on computing resources housed at the University of Texas, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

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