Spatially-correlated Site Occupancy in the Nonstoichiometric Meta-stable ε-Al<sub>60</sub>Sm<sub>11</sub> Phase during Devitrification of Al-10.2 at.% Sm Glasses

ORAL

Abstract

We examine a metastable ε-Al60Sm11 phase that appears during the initial devitrification of as-quenched Al-10.2 at.% Sm glasses. The phase is nonstoichiometric in nature since Al occupation is observed on the 16f Sm lattice sites. STEM images reveal profound spatial correlation of Sm content on these sites, which cannot be explained by the “average crystal” description from Rietveld analysis. Monte Carlo simulations based on a cluster-expansion model also give qualitatively different correlation functions from experiments. On the other hand, molecular dynamics simulations of the growth of ε-Al60Sm11 show that when the diffusion range of Sm is limited to ~ 4 Å, the correlation function of the as-grown structure agrees well with that of the STEM images. Our results show that kinetic effects, especially the limited diffusivity of Sm atoms plays the fundamental role in determining the nonstoichiometric site occupancies of the ε phase during the crystallization process.

*This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Science and Engineering Division including a grant of computer time at NERSC in Berkeley, under contract # DE-AC02-07CH11358. The GPU-accelerated MD calculations were supported by LDRD of Ames Laboratory.

Presenters

  • Kai-Ming Ho

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Iowa State University
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University

Authors

  • Lin Yang

    • Iowa State University
  • Feng Zhang

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Fan-Qiang Meng

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Lin Zhou

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Yang Sun

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Xin Zhao

    • Ames Laboratory
  • zhuo ye

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Matthew J. Kramer

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Ames Laboratory, U.S. DOE, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA
  • Cai-Zhuang Wang

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Physics, Iowa State University
  • Kai-Ming Ho

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Iowa State University
    • Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University