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A simple way of understanding the nonadditivity of van der Waals dispersion forces C. Farina,a) F. C. Santos,b) and A. C. Tortc) Instituto de Fı́sica, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Cidade Universitária, Ilha do Fundão, Caixa Postal 68528, 21945-970 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil ~Received 1 April 1998; accepted 22 September 1998! Using a semiclassical model for three interacting fluctuating dipoles we introduce a simple scenario in which the nonadditivity of the van der Waals dispersion forces arises in a very transparent way. For simplicity, we illustrate our model in the case of nonretarded dispersion forces. The argument can be straightforwardly generalized to the case of N interacting fluctuating dipoles. For pedagogical reasons, we also give a brief review of some basic points concerning van der Waals forces. © 1999 American Association of Physics Teachers. I. INTRODUCTION The name of van der Waals is inextricably related to the equation of state for real gases, proposed by him in his thesis1 in 1873. Written for 1 mol of gas this equation reads S P1 D a ~ V2b ! 5RT, V2 ~1! where P, V, and T are the pressure, volume, and the absolute temperature, respectively, and R is the universal gas constant. The parameters a and b are known as van der Waals constants and their respective values can be obtained by fitting this equation of state to the experimental data. The presence of the constant b in ~1! takes into account the finite size of the molecules and tells us that one individual gas molecule does not have access to the total volume V. As to the parameter a, this constant was associated by van der Waals with an attractive force between two molecules. A consequence of such intermolecular ~attractive! forces is to diminish the pressure at the walls. Although van der Waals suggested explicit forms for these intermolecular potentials, he was not able to explain the precise origin of the forces responsible for the appearance of parameter a. When we talk about van der Waals attraction, it is tacitly assumed that we are dealing with molecules ~atoms! whose separation is large enough to exclude the overlapping of electronic orbitals. In this case, we can distinguish three types of van der Waals forces, to wit: orientation, induction, and dispersion van der Waals forces, which we now describe briefly ~a more detailed discussion can be found in Refs. 2, 3, and 4!. The orientation van der Waals force corresponds to the force between two polar molecules ~polar here means that the molecule has a permanent electric dipole moment, for instance a water molecule!. W. H. Keesom, in the early twenties, was the first to compute the thermal average of the force between two polar molecules and found a temperaturedependent interaction energy, namely, (22/3)( p 21 p 22 / 4 p e 0 r 6 )(1/k B T), ~for k B T@( p 1 p 2 /4p e 0 r 3 )), where p 1 and p 2 are the magnitudes of the electric dipole moments of the two molecules, respectively, r is the distance between the molecules, and k B is the Boltzmann constant. The attractive nature of the orientation force is not difficult to understand: Although the number of attractive orientations is exactly the same as the number of repulsive ones, the attractive orientations are statistically favored over the repulsive ones. This is 344 Am. J. Phys. 67 ~4!, April 1999 so because the Boltzmann weight is e 2E/k B T ~and hence it diminishes with increasing energy E!, and the smaller energies correspond to attractive orientations. Notice also that the orientation force decreases with increasing temperature. This is quite natural since as the temperature increases repulsive orientations tend to be as accessible as attractive orientations. Approximately at the same time, P. Debye and others recognized that even if one molecule had a permanent dipole moment ~or even a higher multipole moment, as for example, a permanent quadrupole moment! and the other had not, the first molecule would induce a dipole moment in the second one and a resulting dipole–dipole ~quadrupole–dipole,...! attractive force would appear. That the induction van der Waals force is also attractive is not difficult to understand: It suffices to remember a very common experience, namely, that neutral tiny pieces of dielectric material such as small pieces of paper are always attracted by a charged object ~like a small bar of glass charged by friction!. This is so because the induced dipoles point in the same direction as the electric field that induced them, and these relative orientations give rise to an attractive resultant force. Moreover, due to this correlation between the induced dipole and the dipole of the polar molecule, the induction force does not vanish with increasing temperature. There is still another important feature of induction forces: its dependence on the distance r between the two molecules is proportional to 1/r 7 , which can be qualitatively understood as follows: Recall that the magnitude of the induced dipole on the second molecule ( p 2 ) is proportional to the magnitude of the electric field created by the ~permanent! dipole moment of the first molecule (E 1 ), which in turn is of the form E 1 ' p 1 /r 3 . The electrostatic energy between the molecules is then U ~ r ! ' p 2 E 1 ~ r ! ' a E 21 ~ r ! ' a p 21 , r6 ~2! where a is the molecular polarizability. Since U(r) is proportional to 1/r 6 , the force has the 1/r 7 behavior mentioned above. However, neither the orientation forces nor the induction ones can explain the attraction between molecules ~atoms! in all cases, as for example the attractive interaction between two noble gas atoms, since these types of forces still require at least one molecule ~atom! to exhibit a permanent dipole ~quadrupole! moment. © 1999 American Association of Physics Teachers 344 The explanation of the true origin of such general forces had to wait for the advent of quantum mechanics. In 1930, F. London5 using perturbation theory showed that even if neither molecule posessed a permanent dipole moment, they still would attract each other. It was only necessary that dipole moments could be induced in both molecules. In other words the molecules ought to be polarizable ~the molecular polarizability a must be different from zero!. Since the polarizability is related to the refractive index and dispersion, this type of force is known as dispersion force. At this point it is quite natural to ask ourselves how these induced dipoles arise in both molecules ~remember that none of them had initially a permanent dipole moment!. Here, classical physics fails completely as dispersion forces have a genuine quantum origin. Modern quantum field theory, considered as one of the most important scientific achievements of the twentieth century, tells us that even when the ‘‘medium’’ is the vacuum, there is a residual ~quantized! electromagnetic field E(r,t) and B„r,t) whose vacuum expectation value is zero, but whose fluctuations given by ^ E2 & and ^ B2 & do not average to zero. The vacuum field will induce an instantaneous dipole moment in one molecule, which in turn, together with the vacuum electromagnetic field, will also induce in the second molecule another instantaneous dipole moment. We can say then that the vacuum electromagnetic field induces fluctuating dipoles in both atoms and the dipole–dipole interaction of these zero-mean but correlated dipoles corresponds to the van der Waals dispersive interaction ~see Milonni’s book4 for a detailed discussion on the connection between dispersion forces and the vacuum electromagnetic field!. There are two types of dispersion forces, to wit: nonretarded and retarded dispersion forces. Nonretarded forces occur when the speed of light is taken to be infinite, so that the interaction between two molecules is instantaneous. Retarded dispersion forces occur when we take into account the finiteness of the speed of light. In this case, the dipole field of the first molecule, which is induced by the vacuum fluctuations, will reach the second one after the time interval r/c. Consequently, the reaction field of the second molecule will be delayed at the first one by the time interval 2r/c. Nonretarded forces are then good approximations when the distance between the molecules is small. As the distance between the two molecules increases, retardation effects become more and more important. London’s work5 refers to nonretarded dispersion forces and shows that for two identical polarizable atoms the interaction potential energy is given by U ~ r ! 52 S D 1 4pe0 2 3\ v 0 a 2 , 4r 6 ~3! where in the above formula a means the static polarization of each atom and v 0 is the transition frequency between the ground state and the first excited one. Almost two decades after London’s result Casimir and Polder6 obtained for the first time, after an involved perturbative quantum electrodynamics calculation, the expression for the retarded dispersion van der Waals forces between two polarizable atoms. Basically, retardation effects change the 1/r 6 behavior of the interaction energy to 1/r 7 . However, this change in the power law for the dispersion force with increasing distance was not easy to verify experimentally and only in 1968 Tabor and Winterton7 were able to achieve this goal. 345 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 67, No. 4, April 1999 To conclude this brief review concerning van der Waals forces, it is worth emphasizing at this point that van der Waals forces ~orientation, induction, and dispersion! have a great variety of theoretical and practical applications as for example: in condensation and crystallization, in structural and energetic effects in colloid chemistry and biology, in surface physics and chemistry, in the large field of adhesion and its implications in washing ~good detergents must diminish van der Waals attraction between dirt and clothing!, in its connection with the so-called Casimir effect8 ~retarded dispersion force!, among others. Here we shall be concerned with dispersion forces, in particular with a very important property of these forces, namely, their nonadditivity. It is a well-known fact that the retarded and unretarded dispersion van der Waals forces are nonadditive, that is, the resultant force which acts on a given fluctuating dipole ~polarizable molecule! due to the presence of the other fluctuating dipoles ~other polarizable molecules! is not simply given by the sum of the individual forces that each one of them would exert if all the others were absent. In other words, the force between two fluctuating dipoles ~polarizable molecules! is altered in a nontrivial way by the presence of a third one, see, for example, Refs. 2, 3, and 4, and references therein. The degree of nonadditivity, however, may depend on the density of the medium. In fact, for rarefied media it is possible to suppose that the forces are additive. For two semi-infinite dielectric slabs this leads, for instance, to an attractive macroscopic force which is inversely proportional to the cube of the distance between the slabs in the nonretarded case. If retardation effects are taken into account then one obtains a force which is inversely proportional to the fourth power of the distance between the slabs. Although the functional dependence of the force with the distance between the slabs is correct, the theoretical values computed taking into account only pair interaction do not fit experimental data. It was precisely this discrepancy between experimental results and microscopic theories that assume additive van der Waals forces that led to a consideration of their nonadditivity.9 The main purpose of this article is to show in a simple and transparent approach how the nonadditivity of these forces arises allowing in this way students with a very elementary knowledge of quantum mechanics to understand such an important issue. For simplicity, we shall work here only with nonretarded van der Waals forces. For pedagogical reasons this article is organized as follows: In order to introduce the notation and basic ideas of the model to be employed, Sect. II is devoted to a rederivation of London’s result; in Sect. III we generalize the model of Sect. II to the case of three polarizable molecules which suffices to make the first ‘‘nonadditive’’ term ~in the expression for the energy of the system! appear. Section IV is left for the conclusions and final remarks. II. LONDON’S RESULT: A SEMICLASSICAL APPROACH In order to introduce the basic ideas as well as to establish our notation, we shall review London’s result5 using an elementary approach for the dispersive nonretarded van der Waals forces between two neutral but polarizable atoms. In this model the instantaneous dipole moments exhibited by each atom will be simulated by a point charge e oscillating harmonically with angular frequency v 0 around a fixed point Farina, Santos, and Tort 345 ~‘‘the electronic cloud around a fixed nucleus’’!. The restoring harmonic force linking the electron to the center of force simulates its binding to the nucleus ~which remains fixed by assumption!. It is well known that for many purposes an atom in its ground state level can be represented by a charged harmonic oscillator.4 Hence, this assumption means that we shall obtain the interaction energy between two ground state atoms. To neglect retardation effects in the propagation of the electromagnetic field means essentially that the time interval that a light signal takes to propagate between the two molecules, which is given by DT5r/c, is much smaller than the characteristic time associated with the system, which is given by D t '1/v 0 , where v 0 5(E 1 2E 0 )/\'(mc 2 /\) a 2fsc. Here, a fsc is the fine structure constant ( a fscªe 2 /(4 p e 0 \c)'1/137). Since the Bohr radius a 0 can be written as a 0 5\c/ a fscmc 2 , it follows that the nonretarded regime holds if DT!D t , or r!137a 0 . For our purposes, it suffices to consider these oscillations in fixed directions ~although with the relative orientations of the two instantaneous dipoles completely arbitrary!. We know that the force between induced dipoles must be attractive, so it is desirable that this model reproduces this peculiarity for arbitrary directions. This is not obvious and we will come to this point later. Besides, we shall neglect the radiation emitted by these oscillating dipoles and consequently in the following discussion there will be no radiation reaction terms. This fact should cause no surprise: Recall that we are trying to obtain the interaction energy between two atoms in their ground state. In order to get an expression for the nonretarded van der Waals interaction energy between these atoms in such a way that its connection with zero-point energy becomes clear, we must proceed as follows: First, we write down the ~coupled! classical equations of motion for both oscillating charges, taking into account the electric force that one exerts on the other; then, we decouple these equations and compute the frequencies of the corresponding normal modes. Finally, since dispersion forces are genuinely quantum in nature, we must quantize the system of the two independent oscillators ~normal modes!, compute the associated ground state energy level, and identify the desired interaction energy as the difference between this energy and the ground state energy of the decoupled system of oscillating charges. This is equivalent to taking as the interaction energy the expression containing only the terms involving the distance r between the atoms. Denoting by x i the displacement of the electron attached to atom i from its equilibrium position and assuming that u x i u is much smaller than the distance r between the atoms, the electric field created, for instance by the first oscillating charge at the position of the second one, can be considered as the field of an electric dipole pW 1 (t)5ex 1 (t) m̂ 1 , where m̂ 1 is a unit vector which determines the fixed ~but otherwise arbitrary! direction of oscillation of the first instantaneous dipole ~recall that there is no monopole term because the atom is neutral and the oscillating charge is just a way of simulating its fluctuating dipole!. Denoting by w the angular frequency of the oscillating dipole, this field is given by,10 W 1 ~ P 2 ,t ! 5 E H S D J 346 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 67, No. 4, April 1999 W 1 ~ P 2 ,t ! • m̂ 2 5 e 2E ~4! e 2x 1~ t ! @ 3 ~ r̂• m̂ 1 !~ r̂• m̂ 2 ! 2 m̂ 1 • m̂ 2 # . 4 p e 0r 3 ~5! Hence, the equations of motion for these oscillating charges are simply ẍ 1 ~ t ! 1 v 20 x 1 ~ t ! 5K 12x 2 ~ t ! , ~6! ẍ 2 ~ t ! 1 v 20 x 2 ~ t ! 5K 12x 1 ~ t ! , where for convenience we defined K 125 S D e2 Q 12 , 4 p e 0r 3 m ~7! Q 125 @ 3 ~ r̂• m̂ 1 !~ r̂• m̂ 2 ! 2 m̂ 1 • m̂ 2 # , where m is the mass of the electron. The factor Q 12 is the spatial orientation factor. The above equations describe a coupled system with two vibrational degrees of freedom, which can be decoupled in the usual way by introducing normal coordinates, say h 1 and h 2 , as follows: h 1 ~ t ! 5x 1 ~ t ! 1x 2 ~ t ! , ~8! h 2 ~ t ! 5x 1 ~ t ! 2x 2 ~ t ! . ~9! The resulting ~decoupled! equations are simply ḧ 1 1 v 21 h 1 50, ~10! ḧ 2 1 v 22 h 2 50, ~11! where the normal frequencies are given by v 6 5 ~ v 20 7K 12! 1/2 S 5 v 0 17 K 12 K 212 K 312 5K 412 2v0 8v0 16v 0 128v 0 22 47 62 8 1O S DD K 512 v 10 0 , ~12! K 12! v 20 where we assumed here that ~see the discussion in Sec. IV!. The quantization of this system is immediate since it consists of two independent harmonic oscillators with frequencies v 1 and v 2 , respectively. The corresponding ground state energy is then E5 \ ~ v 11 v 2 ! 2 H 5\ v 0 12 e x ~ t2r/c ! @ 3 ~ r̂• m̂ 1 ! r̂2 m̂ 1 # 4pe0 1 1 ik k 2 ~ r̂3 m̂ 1 ! 3r̂ 3 32 2 1 , r r r where k5 v /c. In the above equation, we identify clearly the near field electrostatic contribution ~terms proportional to 1/r 3 ! and the radiation field ~the term proportional to 1/r!. Since we are interested in nonretarded dispersion forces, which means small distances between the atoms, the dominant term turns out to be the near field contribution. Also, x 1 (t2r/c) can be approximated by x 1 (t). The component of the relevant electric force exerted by the dipole e 1 x 1 m̂ 1 upon e 2 along the allowed direction of oscillations of e 2 ~determined by m̂ 2 ! is then (e 1 5e 2 5e) K 212 8 v 40 2 5K 412 128v 80 1O S DJ K 612 v 12 0 . ~13! Substituting ~7! into ~13! and identifying U(r) with the r-dependent terms we obtain to lowest order in powers of K 12 / v 20 , Farina, Santos, and Tort 346 U~ r ! 5E223 21 \ v 0 52 S D 1 4pe0 2 ~14! Q 212\ v 0 a 2 8r 6 , ~15! where in the previous equation e 2 /m v 20 was identified with the classical static polarizability a of an atom ~considered as a charged harmonic oscillator!. Now, we can understand why this model ~with fixed directions! works: We know that the total quantum mechanical energy of two independent oscillators always diminishes when coupling terms between them of the form given by Eq. ~6! are introduced. This fact becomes very clear if we look at Eq. ~12! ~notice that the first corrections to v 1 and v 2 have opposite signs, but the second-order corrections have the same sign and are both negative!. Of course the semiclassical model presented here could not yield London’s result with all numerical factors. However, it must be clear that our purpose in this section was simply to introduce the fluctuating oscillator model. Anyway, London’s result can be obtained if we think of a as the quantum static polarization and v 0 as the angular frequency associated with the transition between the ground state and the first excited one and change Q 212 by its corresponding quantum mechanical evaluation which gives the factor 2 33, see for instance Refs. 11 and 12. ~Quantum mechanically, a is given by (2/3\)( u dW u / v 0 ), where u dW u is the dipole moment amplitude between the ground state and the first excited one.! III. NONADDITIVITY OF VAN DER WAALS DISPERSION FORCES The standard discussions of the nonadditivity of dispersion van der Waals forces are in general rather involved for students with an elementary knowledge of quantum theory ~the interested reader can find a detailed discussion on this subject in the excellent book by Langbein2!. It is also possible to introduce the nonadditive effects in connection with the ~quantized! vacuum electromagnetic field. For instance, in order to discuss the nonadditivity of van der Waals forces, Milonni4 considered the interaction energy of an ~induced! oscillating dipole pW with the quantized source-free electromagnetic field ~vacuum field!. In the quantization of the field, or in other words, in computing the mode functions for the field, the presence of all the other atoms ~considered also as induced oscillating dipoles! must be taken into account. After a rather involved calculation it is shown that nonadditive terms contribute to the expectation value of the energy of the induced dipole pW i at point rW i in the quantized sourcefree electric field E(ri ,t), namely, ^ Ei & 52 21 ^ pi •E(ri ,t) & . These terms are three-body contributions of third order ~associated with the triplet i,j,l! of the form4 ^ Ei jl & } a3 , r 3i j r 3jl r 3il ~16! where a is the static polarizability of the atoms, considered identical in the formula above. This kind of term had already been derived before through standard perturbation theory and studies concerning its magnitude and sign date from the early forties.13 It is precisely this kind of term that we want to derive here using an elementary approach, namely, a simple generaliza347 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 67, No. 4, April 1999 tion of the model used in Sec. II. Hence, in order to discuss the nonadditivity of nonretarded van der Waals dispersion forces in a simple way we shall introduce a third fluctating dipole ~polarizable atom! interacting with the other two. Using the same assumptions as in Sec. II, the equations of motion now read ẍ 1 ~ t ! 1 v 20 x 1 ~ t ! 5K 12x 2 ~ t ! 1K 13x 3 ~ t ! , ẍ 2 ~ t ! 1 v 20 x 2 ~ t ! 5K 12x 1 ~ t ! 1K 23x 3 ~ t ! , ~17! ẍ 3 ~ t ! 1 v 20 x 3 ~ t ! 5K 13x 1 ~ t ! 1K 23x 2 ~ t ! , where in an obvious notation the symmetrical coefficients K i j define the coupling constants between the three oscillating charges and are given by Ki j5 Qij 4 p e 0 r 3i j with S D e2 m Q i j 53 ~ m̂ i •r̂ i j !~ m̂ j •r̂ i j ! 2 m̂ i • m̂ j . ~18! As before, the above coupled equations describe a system of three ~vibrational! degrees of freedom that can also be decoupled by introducing normal coordinates. Since we need only compute the normal frequencies and recalling that when the system vibrates in one of its normal modes all particles oscillate with the same frequency, we can substitute into ~17! x i 5C i exp$ivt% which yields S v 20 2 v 2 2K 12 2K 13 2K 12 v 20 2 v 2 2K 23 2K 23 v 20 2 v 2 2K 13 DS D S D x1 0 x2 5 0 . x3 0 ~19! In order to avoid trivial solutions we must require that the above transformation have no inverse, which is equivalent to setting the determinant of the above matrix to zero. This assumption simply gives ~ v 20 2 v 2 ! 3 2 ~ K 2121K 2131K 223!~ v 20 2 v 2 ! 22K 12K 13K 2350. ~20! The desired eigenfrequencies v i , i51,2,3, are then the positive roots of this equation. After quantization the ground state energy of the three fluctuating dipoles is given by E5 \ ~ v 11 v 21 v 3 !. 2 ~21! Defining b ª v 20 2 v 2 , we rewrite Eq. ~20! in the form b 3 2 ~ K 2121K 2131K 223! b 22K 12K 13K 2350 and Eq. ~21! in the form E5 \v0 2 HS 12 b1 v 20 D S 1/2 1 12 b2 v 20 D S 1/2 1 12 b3 v 20 ~22! DJ 1/2 , ~23! where b i ª v 20 2 v 2i , i51,2,3 are the roots of Eq. ~22!. Next, making a Taylor expansion of each term in Eq. ~23! in powers of b i / v 20 , we get E5 H \v0 1 32 ~ b 1 b 21 b 3 ! 2 2 v 20 1 2 1 8 v 40 ~ b 21 1 b 22 1 b 23 ! 2 J ~24! Farina, Santos, and Tort 347 1 16v 60 ~ b 31 1 b 32 1 b 33 ! . It is interesting to observe that all the terms on the righthand side ~RHS! of Eq. ~24! are symmetrical functions of the roots of Eq. ~22! and consequently, it will be not necessary to determine explicitly each root b i , since these functions can be expressed directly as functions of the coefficients of the algebraic equation. For a general algebraic equation of the third degree, namely, a 0 x 3 1a 1 x 2 1a 2 x1a 3 50, x 1 x 2 x 3 52 which implies an interaction energy given by U~ r 12 ,r 13 ,r 23! 5E2 1 a2 , a0 ~26! a3 . a0 Comparing Eqs. ~22!, ~25!, and ~26!, we can write b 1 1 b 2 1 b 3 50, ~27! b 1 b 2 1 b 1 b 3 1 b 2 b 3 52 ~ K 2121K 2131K 223! , ~28! b 1 b 2 b 3 52K 12K 13K 23 . ~29! What we must do now is to use the above equations in order to obtain the expressions for the sum of the squares of the roots ( b 21 1 b 22 1 b 23 ) as well as the sum of the cubes of the roots ( b 31 1 b 32 1 b 33 ) as required by Eq. ~24!. Taking then the square of ~27! we get b 21 1 b 22 1 b 23 522 ~ b 1 b 2 1 b 1 b 3 1 b 2 b 3 ! 52 ~ K 2121K 2131K 223! , ~30! where we used Eq. ~28!. For the sum of the cubes of the roots, we take as a starting point the identity b 31 1 b 32 1 b 33 1 b 21 b 2 1 b 22 b 1 1 b 21 b 3 1 b 23 b 1 1 b 22 b 3 1 b 23 b 2 50, ~31! which follows immediately from Eq. ~27! if we multiply both sides by ( b 21 1 b 22 1 b 23 ). On the other hand, using Eq. ~27! again, we can write b 1 b 2 ~ b 1 1 b 2 1 b 3 ! 50→ b 21 b 2 1 b 22 b 1 52 b 1 b 2 b 3 , b 1 b 3 ~ b 1 1 b 2 1 b 3 ! 50→ b 21 b 3 1 b 23 b 1 52 b 1 b 2 b 3 , ~32! b 2 b 3 ~ b 1 1 b 2 1 b 3 ! 50→ b 22 b 3 1 b 23 b 2 52 b 1 b 2 b 3 , so that b 21 b 2 1 b 22 b 1 1 b 21 b 3 1 b 23 b 1 1 b 22 b 3 1 b 23 b 2 523 b 1 b 2 b 3 . ~33! Substituting the previous equation into ~31! and also using Eq. ~29!, we obtain b 31 1 b 32 1 b 33 56K 12K 13K 23 . ~34! Therefore, substituting Eqs. ~27!, ~30!, and ~34! into Eq. ~24! we finally obtain 348 J '2 a1 , a0 x 1 x 2 1x 1 x 3 1x 2 x 3 51 H 1 3 \v0 2 2 2 32 K K K , 4 ~ K 121K 131K 23 ! 2 2 4v0 8 v 60 12 13 23 ~35! ~25! we write below the basic combinations of its roots as x 1 1x 2 1x 3 52 E' Am. J. Phys., Vol. 67, No. 4, April 1999 3 \v0 2 \v0 8 HS D S a 4pe0 S D a 3 2 4pe0 3 2 Q 212 r 612 1 Q 12Q 13Q 23 r 312r 313r 323 Q 213 J r 613 1 . Q 223 r 623 D ~36! The first three terms on the RHS of ~36! represent pairwise additive contributions to the interaction potential between the three oscillators. The last term on the RHS of ~36! is a threebody contribution to the interaction and therefore it spoils the additivity. This can be seen as follows: If the force that acts on one of the dipoles, say number one, is computed from ~36!, then the result will be different from the sum FW 21 1FW 31 , where FW 21(FW 31) is the force that dipole number two ~three! would exert on dipole number one in the absence of dipole number three ~two!. In order to connect the threebody contribution appearing in ~36! with that written in Eq. ~16!, it suffices to set a 5e 2 /m v 20 and identify this constant with the polarizability at the transition frequency v 0 5(E 1 2E 0 )/\ between the ground and the first excited state, which is the principal transition for this system. After this we will have the kind of term appearing as the lowest order nonadditive contribution to van der Waals forces in the case of N interacting fluctuating dipoles in Milonni’s calculation.4 Notice also that this term, depending on the geometrical arrangement of the oscillators, may yield an attractive or a repulsive contribution.13 IV. FINAL REMARKS AND CONCLUSIONS In this paper we applied the fluctuating dipole model to the case of three ~polarizable! atoms in order to explain on elementary grounds how the nonadditivity of dispersion van der Waals forces arises. The application of this model to the case of N interacting fluctuating dipoles is straightforward and yields correctly many interesting results as for example: ~i! There will not be any linear term in K i j in the expression for U in analogy with what happens for N52 @see Eq. ~14!# and for N53 @see Eq. ~36!#. ~ii! Although the cubic term in K 12 is absent from the expression for U in the N52 case @see Eq. ~14!#, cubic terms in K i j will appear for N>3, giving rise to the lowest order nonadditive terms. These terms correspond to the three-body contribution to the interaction van der Waals energy. ~iii! Higher order nonadditive terms also appear, namely, four-body contributions,..., N-body contributions. The N-body term is of the form ( a /4p e 0 r 3 ) N , a and r being a typical atomic polarizability and a typical interatomic distance, respectively. Consequently, the N-body term is a /4p e 0 r 3 times smaller than the (N21), term. Hence, in order to make sense the model must satisfy the condition a /4p e 0 r 3 !1. In fact, substituting typical values @recall that a 5e 2 /m v 20 and that v 0 can be thought of as the transition frequency between the ground state and first excited one, that is, v 0 is a few eV ~s! per \# we obtain for an Farina, Santos, and Tort 348 intermolecular distance r'10 Å that a /4p e 0 r 3 '1023 !1. It is worth emphasizing that this value for r is compatible with an earlier assumption, namely, r!137a 0 . We would also like to emphasize the importance of the nonadditive terms in the evaluation of the force between macroscopic objects like spheres, cylinders, or slabs. Although the dependence of this force on the relevant distance involved in each case is correct even if we take into account only pair interactions, numerical values will fit correctly the experimental data only when nonadditivity is not neglected. Finally, we cannot conclude this article without mentioning that retarded dispersion forces between macroscopic objects ~with all nonadditive contributions! correspond to the so-called electromagnetic Casimir force between them, which since Casimir’s seminal paper8 can be computed directly from the fluctuations of the confined ~vacuum! electromagnetic field subjected to the appropriate boundary conditions. The Casimir effect was verified experimentally for the first time by Sparnaay14 with a poor accuracy and recently by Lamoreaux,15 and Mohideen and Roy16 with an excellent agreement between theory and experimental data, but that is another story. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors are indebted to M. V. Cougo-Pinto, A. N. Vaidya, V. Mostepanenko, and G. L. Klimchitskaya for enlightning discussions. One of us ~CF! wishes to acknowledge the partial financial support of CNPq ~the National Research Council of Brazil!. a! Electronic mail: [email protected] Electronic mail: [email protected] c! Electronic mail: [email protected] 1 J. D. van der Waals, ‘‘Over de continuiteit van den gas-en vloeistoftoestand,’’ Dissertation, Leiden, 1873. 2 Dieter Langbein, Theory of Van der Waals Attraction, Springer Tracts in Modern Physics, Vol. 72 ~Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1974!. 3 H. Margenau and N. R. Kestner, Theory of Intermolecular Forces ~Pergamon, New York, 1969!. 4 P. W. Milonni, The Quantum Vaccum: An Introduction to Quantum Electrodynamics ~Academic, New York, 1994!. 5 F. London, ‘‘Zur Theorie und Systematik der Molecularkrafte,’’ Z. Phys. 63, 245 ~1930!. 6 H. B. G. Casimir and D. Polder, ‘‘The Influence of Retardation on the London-van der Waals Forces,’’ Phys. Rev. 73, 360–372 ~1948!. 7 D. Tabor and R. H. S. Winterton, ‘‘Direct measurement of normal and retarded van der Waals forces,’’ Nature ~London! 219, 1120–1121 ~1968!. 8 H. B. G. Casimir, ‘‘On the Attraction Between Two Perfectly Conducting Planes,’’ Proc. K. Ned. Akad. Wet. 51, 793–795 ~1948!. 9 E. M. Lifshitz, ‘‘The Theory of Molecular Attractive Forces between Solids,’’ Sov. Phys. JETP 2, 73–83 ~1956!. 10 J. D. Jackson, Classical Electrodynamics ~Wiley, New York, 1975!, 2nd ed., p. 395. 11 P. W. Milonni and P. L. Knight, ‘‘Retardation in the resonant interaction of two identical atoms,’’ Phys. Rev. A 10, 1096–1108 ~1974!; ‘‘Retarded interaction of two nonidentical atoms’’ ibid., 11, 1090–1092 ~1975!. 12 P. W. Milonni, ‘‘Semiclassical and Quantum-Electrodynamical Approach in NonRelativistic Theory,’’ Phys. Rep., Phys. Lett. 25C, 1–81 ~1976!. 13 B. M. Axilrod and E. Teller, ‘‘Interaction of the van der Waals Type Between Three Atoms,’’ J. Chem. Phys. 11, 299–300 ~1943!. 14 M. J. Sparnaay, ‘‘Measurements of Attractive Forces between Flat Plates,’’ Physica ~Amsterdam! 24, 751–764 ~1958!. 15 S. K. Lamoreaux, ‘‘Demonstration of the Casimir Force in the 0.6 to 6 mm Range,’’ Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 5–8 ~1997!. 16 U. Mohideen and A. Roy, ‘‘A precision measurement of the Casimir force from 0, 1 to 0, 9 mm,’’ hep-ph/9805038. b! PROPER USE OF THE SEMICOLON With the war ended, Purcell could hardly suppress thoughts of returning to academia. The problem was, he had agreed to stay on and help grind out the Rad Lab Series. While never doubting the task’s importance, he nevertheless found it hard to concentrate on writing when the long-suppressed world of research beckoned. It would have been bad enough just writing. But the stultifying bureaucracy associated with the series heightened his angst. Drafts had to be fed to a cadre of nitpicky English teachers who hammered away at the physicists’ syntax and structure. They never let up. As the writing slipped further and further behind schedule, a flood of memos arrived about editorial principles. One day Purcell received a two-page, single-spaced bulletin on the proper use of the semicolon... . Robert Buderi, The Invention that Changed the World ~Simon and Schuster, New York, 1996!, p. 258. 349 Am. J. Phys., Vol. 67, No. 4, April 1999 Farina, Santos, and Tort 349