First-principles lattice dynamics is applied to symmetric tilt grain boundaries (GBs) in Al, Si and MgO, with the goal of revealing critical factors in determining excess vibrational entropies at the atomic level. Excess vibrational entropies at GBs are found to vary depending on the substances. Al GBs tend to show larger excess entropies and hence larger temperature dependence of the GB free energies than those in Si and MgO. Most of the Si GBs show small excess entropies. For Al and MgO, atom-projected vibrational entropies are well correlated with bond-length changes at GB cores, and have large positive values as bond lengths increase for GB atoms. This demonstrates that a similar mechanism likely dominates excess vibrational entropies of GBs for both substances, despite their dissimilar bonding nature. For Si GBs, atoms with threefold coordination do not simply follow such a correlation, implying the importance of other factors that are different from bond-length changes. These systematic comparisons will be a foothold for understanding a physical origin of excess entropies at GBs even in more complex substances.
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RSC Adv
January 2025
Central Labs, King Khalid University AlQura'a, P.O. Box 960 Abha Saudi Arabia.
Investigations on two-dimensional materials for efficient carbon dioxide (CO) capture and storage have recently attracted much attention, especially in the global industrial sector. In this work, the CO uptake by three configurations of two-dimensional magnesium oxide was investigated using density functional theory. CO capture analysis was performed considering the geometrical, thermophysical, vibrational, electronic and optical properties.
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Key Laboratory of High-temperature and High-pressure Study of the Earth's Interior, Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guiyang 550081 Guizhou, China. Electronic address:
High-pressure and high-temperature Raman spectra of natural pyromorphite, vanadinite and mimetite were measured up to 11 GPa and 973 K, respectively. No phase transition was observed within the temperature and pressure ranges in this study. Raman modes for pyromorphite, vanadinite and mimetite vary with temperature or pressure linearly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
January 2025
Theoretical Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA.
The kinetics of dislocation reactions, such as dislocation multiplication, controls the plastic deformation in crystals beyond their elastic limit, therefore critical mechanisms in a number of applications in materials science. We present a series of large-scale molecular dynamics simulations that shows that one such type of reactions, the nucleation of dislocation at free surfaces, exhibit unconventional kinetics, including unexpectedly large nucleation rates under compression, very strong entropic stabilization under tension, as well as strong non-Arrhenius behavior. These unusual kinetics are quantitatively rationalized using a variational transition state theory approach coupled with an efficient numerical scheme for the estimation of vibrational entropy changes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale
January 2025
Laboratory for Multiscale Mechanics and Medical Science, SV LAB, School of Aerospace, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an 710049, China.
Based on the molecular dynamics (AIMD), the temperature and velocity statistics of diatomic semiconductors were proposed to be classified by atomic species. The phase differences resulting from lattice vibrations of different atoms indicated the presence of anharmonicity at finite atomic temperatures. To further explore the electronic properties, the effect of temperature on electrostatic potential field vibrations in semiconductors was studied, and the concept of electrostatic potential oscillation (EPO) at finite atomic temperature was introduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Mater
January 2025
Materials Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
New computational tools for solid-state synthesis recipe design are needed in order to accelerate the experimental realization of novel functional materials proposed by high-throughput materials discovery workflows. This work contributes a cellular automaton simulation framework for predicting the time-dependent evolution of intermediate and product phases during solid-state reactions as a function of precursor choice and amount, reaction atmosphere, and heating profile. The simulation captures the effects of reactant particle spatial distribution, particle melting, and reaction atmosphere.
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