Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7988648 | Intermetallics | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
We present a detailed investigation of the influence of atomic vibrations on the point defect and diffusion properties of ordered metallic alloys, by means of ab initio calculations with density-functional theory. Considering the case of Ni2Al3 which provides a rich panel of defect-related properties, our study reveals that the behaviour of this compound is largely monitored by self-interstitials, whereas such defects are usually ignored in metallic compounds. The vibration free energies are obtained for the full set of point defects of Ni2Al3, showing that these quantities are strongly defect-dependent, and significantly modify the free energy of the compound in an intricate composition-dependent manner. The second key-issue is the first ab initio full analysis of attempt frequencies, via the coupling of vibration analysis and saddle-point search for significant atomic jumps. This analysis indicates that attempt frequencies range over several orders of magnitude and exponentially increase with migration energies. We show the importance of these factors in reaching realistic composition-dependent diffusion coefficients.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Metals and Alloys
Authors
David Tingaud, Rémy Besson,