Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1567583 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2010 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper, ab initio modeling is used to predict diffusion relevant thermodynamic and kinetic information for dilute Ni–Cr and Ni–Fe alloys. The modeling results are then used to determine the phenomenological coefficient matrices and the tracer diffusion coefficients for both vacancy and interstitial mediated diffusion. In addition to predicting diffusion coefficients, this ab initio-based approach provides information typically inaccessible to experiments, including the different contributions to diffusion (e.g., electronic excitation effects), the species dependence of interstitial diffusion, and the deviations from Arrhenius-type relations, which are often used to describe and extrapolate experimental diffusion data. It is found that: (1) Cr is the fastest diffusing species in Ni by both vacancy and interstitial diffusion, followed by Fe and then Ni. The enhanced diffusivity of Cr is primarily due to differences in migration barriers and binding energies, not pre-exponential factors. (2) Fe and Cr solutes in Ni have weak interactions with vacancies but Cr solutes bind strongly to interstitial defects. (3) Cr exhibits non-Arrhenius behavior in both vacancy and interstitial mediated diffusion. (4) Temperature dependent electronic contributions have a significant impact on the diffusion in some cases. (5) The vacancy diffusion mechanism in Ni–Cr changes as a function of temperature resulting in vacancy–solute drag below 460 K.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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