No Arabic abstract
The low energy structures of irradiation-induced defects have been studied in detail, as these determine the available modes by which a defect can diffuse or relax. As a result, there are many studies concerning the relative energies of possible defect structures, and empirical potentials are commonly fitted to or evaluated with respect to these energies. But recently [Dudarev et al Nuclear Fusion 2018], we have shown how to determine the stresses, strains and swelling of reactor components under irradiation from the elastic properties of ensembles of irradiation-induced defects. These elastic properties have received comparatively little attention. Here we evaluate relaxation volumes of irradiation-induced defects in tungsten computed with empirical potentials, and compare to density functional theory results where available. Different empirical potentials give different results, but some potential-independent trends in relaxation volumes can be identified. We show that the relaxation volume of small defects can be predicted to within 10% from their point-defect count. For larger defects we provide empirical fits for the relaxation volume of as a function of size. We demonstrate that the relaxation volume associated with a single primary-damage cascade can be estimated from the primary knock-on atom (PKA) energy. We conclude that while annihilation of vacancy- and interstitial- character defects will invariably reduce the total relaxation volume of the cascade debris, empirical potentials disagree whether coalescence of defects will reduce or increase the total relaxation volume.
The defect relaxation volumes obtained from density-functional theory (DFT) calculations of charged vacancies and interstitials are much larger than their neutral counterparts, seemingly unphysically large. In this work, we investigate the possible reasons for this and revisit the methods that address the calculation of charged defect structures in periodic DFT. We probe the dependence of the proposed energy corrections to charged defect formation energies on relaxation volumes and find that corrections such as the image charge correction and the alignment correction, which can lead to sizable changes in defect formation energies, have an almost negligible effect on the charged defect relaxation volume. We also investigate the volume for the net neutral defect reactions comprised of individual charged defects, and find that the aggregate formation volumes have reasonable magnitudes. This work highlights an important issue that, as for defect formation energies, the defect formation volumes depend on the choice of reservoir. We show that considering the change in volume of the electron reservoir in the formation reaction of the charged defects, analogous to how volumes of atoms are accounted for in defect formation volumes, can renormalize the formation volumes of charged defects such that they are comparable to neutral defects. This approach enables the description of the elastic properties of isolated charged defects within the overall neutral material, beyond the context of the overall defect reactions that produce the charged defect.
Studying the atomic structure of intrinsic defects in two-dimensional transition metal dichalcogenides is difficult since they damage quickly under the intense electron irradiation in transmission electron microscopy (TEM). However, this can also lead to insights into the creation of defects and their atom-scale dynamics. We first show that MoTe 2 monolayers without protection indeed quickly degrade during scanning TEM (STEM) imaging, and discuss the observed atomic-level dynamics, including a transformation from the 1H phase into 1T, three-fold rotationally symmetric defects, and the migration of line defects between two 1H grains with a 60{deg} misorientation. We then analyze the atomic structure of MoTe2 encapsulated between two graphene sheets to mitigate damage, finding the as-prepared material to contain an unexpectedly large concentration of defects. These include similar point defects (or quantum dots, QDs) as those created in the non-encapsulated material, and two different types of line defects (or quantum wires, QWs) that can be transformed from one to the other under electron irradiation. Our density functional theory simulations indicate that the QDs and QWs embedded in MoTe2 introduce new midgap states into the semiconducting material, and may thus be used to control its electronic and optical properties. Finally, the edge of the encapsulated material appears amorphous, possibly due to the pressure caused by the encapsulation.
Point defects in body-centred cubic Fe, Cr and concentrated random magnetic Fe-Cr are investigated using density functional theory and theory of elasticity. The volume of a substitutional Cr atom in ferromagnetic bcc Fe is approximately 18% larger than the volume of a host Fe atom, whereas the volume of a substitutional Fe atom in antiferromagnetic bcc Cr is 5% smaller than the volume of a host Cr atom. Elastic dipole $boldsymbol{P}$ and relaxation volume $boldsymbol{Omega}$ tensors of vacancies and self-interstitial atom (SIA) defects exhibit large fluctuations, with vacancies having negative and SIA large positive relaxation volumes. Dipole tensors of vacancies are nearly isotropic across the entire alloy composition range, with diagonal elements $P_{ii}$ decreasing as a function of Cr content. Fe-Fe and Fe-Cr SIA dumbbells are more anisotropic than Cr-Cr dumbbells. Fluctuations of elastic dipole tensors of SIA defects are primarily associated with the variable crystallographic orientations of the dumbbells. Statistical properties of tensors $boldsymbol{P}$ and $boldsymbol{Omega}$ are analysed using their principal invariants, suggesting that point defects differ significantly in alloys containing below and above 10% at. Cr. The relaxation volume of a vacancy depends sensitively on whether it occupies a Fe or a Cr lattice site. A correlation between elastic relaxation volumes and magnetic moments of defects found in this study suggests that magnetism is a significant factor influencing elastic fields of defects in Fe-Cr alloys.
Structural as well as magnetization studies have been carried out on graphite samples irradiated by neutrons over 50 years in the CIRUS research reactor at Trombay. Neutron diffraction studies reveal that the defects in irradiated graphite samples are not well annealed and remain significant up to high temperatures much greater than 653 K where the Wigner energy is completely released. We infer that the remnant defects may be intralayer Frenkel defects, which do not store large energy, unlike the interlayer Frenkel defects that store the Wigner energy. Magnetization studies on the irradiated graphite show ferromagnetic behavior even at 300 K and a large additional paramagnetic contribution at 5 K. Ab-initio calculations based on the spin-polarized density-functional theory show that the magnetism in defected graphite is essentially confined on to a single 2-coordinated carbon atom that is located around a vacancy in the hexagonal layer.
Using a combination of quantum and classical computational approaches, we model the electronic structure in amorphous silicon in order gain understanding of the microscopic atomic configurations responsible for light induced degradation of solar cells. We demonstrate that regions of strained silicon bonds could be as important as dangling bonds for creating traps for charge carriers. Further, our results show that defects are preferentially formed when a region in the amorphous silicon contains a hole and a light-induced excitation. These results agree with the puzzling dependencies on temperature, time, and pressure observed experimentally.