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We present an extensive first-principles database of solute-vacancy, homoatomic, heteroatomic solute-solute, and solute-solute-vacancy binding energies of relevant alloying elements in aluminum. We particularly focus on the systems with major alloying elements in aluminum, i.e., Cu, Mg, and Si. We consider physical factors such as solute size and formation energies of intermetallic compounds to correlate with binding energies. Systematic studies of the homoatomic solute-solute-vacancy and heteroatomic (Cu, Mg, or Si)-solute-vacancy complexes reveal the overarching effect of the vacancy in stabilizing solute-solute pairs. The computed binding energies of the solute-solute-vacancy triplet successfully explain several experimental observations that remained unexplained by the reported pair binding energies in literature. The binding energy database presented here elucidates the interaction between solute cluster and vacancy in aluminum, and it is expected to provide insight into the design of advanced Al alloys with tailored properties.
Imaging individual vacancies in solids and revealing their interactions with solute atoms remains one of the frontiers in microscopy and microanalysis. Here we study a creep-deformed binary Ni-2 at.% Ta alloy. Atom probe tomography reveals a random d
Irradiation-induced vacancy evolution in face-centered cubic (FCC) Ni under mechanical strains was studied using molecular dynamics simulations. Applied hydrostatic strain led to different stable forms of vacancy clusters, i.e., voids under strain >=
If all humans vanished tomorrow, almost every metal structure would collapse within a century or less, the metal converting to an oxide. In applications ranging from the mature technology of nuts and bolts to high technology batteries, nuclear fuels
Directly imaging all atoms constituting a material and, maybe more importantly, crystalline defects that dictate materials properties, remains a formidable challenge. Here, we propose a new approach to chemistry-sensitive field-ion microscopy (FIM) c
Deformation twinning in pure aluminum has been considered to be a unique property of nanostructured aluminum. A lingering mystery is whether deformation twinning occurs in coarse-grained or single-crystal aluminum, at scales beyond nanotwins. Here, w