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Interplay between hydrogen and nanovoids, despite long-recognized as a central aspect in hydrogen-induced damages in structural materials, remains poorly understood. Focusing on tungsten as a model BCC system, the present study, for the first time, explicitly demonstrated sequential adsorption of hydrogen adatoms on Wigner-Seitz squares of nanovoids with distinct energy levels. Interaction between hydrogen adatoms on the nanovoid surface is shown to be dominated by pairwise power law repulsion. A predictive model was established for quantitative prediction of configurations and energetics of hydrogen adatoms in nanovoids. This model, further combined with equation of states of hydrogen gas, enables prediction of hydrogen molecule formation in nanovoids. Multiscale simulations based on the predictive model were performed, showing excellent agreement with experiments. This work clarifies fundamental physics and provides full-scale predictive model for hydrogen trapping and bubbling in nanovoids, offering long-sought mechanistic insights crucial for understanding hydrogen-induced damages in structural materials.
Hydrogen (H) induced damage in metals has been a long-standing woe for many industrial applications. One form of such damage is linked to H clustering, for which the atomic origin remains contended, particularly for non-hydride forming metals. In thi
Knowledge on structures and energetics of nanovoids is fundamental to understand defect evolution in metals. Yet there remain no reliable methods able to determine essential structural details or to provide accurate assessment of energetics for gener
Surface adsorption, which is often coupled with surface dissolution, is generally unpredictable on alloys due to the complicated alloying and dissolution effects. Herein, we introduce the electronic gradient and cohesive properties of surface sites t
The validity of the structure-property relationships governing the deformation behavior of bcc metals was brought into question with recent {it ab initio} density functional studies of isolated screw dislocations in Mo and Ta. These existing relation
Dislocation motion in body centered cubic (bcc) metals displays a number of specific features that result in a strong temperature dependence of the flow stress, and in shear deformation asymmetries relative to the loading direction as well as crystal