N vacancy, self-interstitial diffusion, and Frenkel-pair formation/dissociation in TiN studied by \textit{ab-initio} and classical molecular dynamics

ORAL

Abstract

We use \textit{ab-initio} and classical molecular dynamics (AIMD, CMD) to simulate diffusion of N vacancy and N self-interstitial point-defects in B1 TiN. The physical properties of TiN, important material system for thin film and coatings applications, are largely dictated by concentration and mobility of point defects. We determine N dilute-point-defect diffusion pathways, activation energies, attempt frequencies, and diffusion coefficients as a function of temperature. In addition, MD simulations reveal an unanticipated atomistic process, which controls the spontaneous formation of N-self-interstitial/N-vacancy pairs (Frenkel pairs) in defect-free TiN. This entails that a N lattice atom leaves its bulk position and bonds to a neighboring N lattice atom. In most cases, Frenkel-pair N$^{\mathrm{I}}$ and N$^{\mathrm{V}}$ recombine within a fraction of ns; 50{\%} of these processes result in the exchange of two nitrogen lattice atoms. Occasionally, however, Frenkel-pair N-interstitial atoms permanently escape from the anion vacancy site, thus producing unpaired N$^{\mathrm{I}}$ and N$^{\mathrm{V}}$ point defects.

*The Knut and Alice Wallenberg foundation (Isotope Project, 2011.0094), the Swedish Research Council (VR) Link\"{o}ping Linnaeus Initiative LiLi-NFM (grant 2008-6572), and the Swedish Government Strategic Research (grant MatLiU 2009-00971)

Authors

  • Davide G. Sangiovanni

    • Department of Physics (IFM), Link\"{o}ping University, Sweden
  • Bj\"{o}rn Alling

    • Department of Physics (IFM), Link\"{o}ping University, Sweden
  • Lars Hultman

    • Department of Physics (IFM), Link\"{o}ping University, Sweden
  • Igor A. Abrikosov

    • Link\"{o}ping University Sweden
    • Link\"oping University
    • Department of Physics (IFM), Link\"{o}ping University, Sweden