4.5 Article

A systematic study of interatomic potentials for mechanical behaviours of Ti-Al alloys

Journal

COMPUTATIONAL MATERIALS SCIENCE
Volume 188, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.commatsci.2020.110239

Keywords

TiAl; Mechanical properties; Interatomic potentials; Atomistic simulations

Funding

  1. Science and Engineering Research Council, A*STAR, Singapore [A18B1b0061]
  2. City University of Hong Kong [9610436]

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This study examined four interatomic potentials developed for the Ti-Al material system and identified their respective strengths and weaknesses in modeling the plastic and fracture properties of the gamma-TiAl and alpha(2)-Ti3Al crystal structures. The results showed that these potentials can accurately reproduce some but not the full scope of the material properties of the crystal structures. One MEAM potential was able to reproduce some properties comparable to DFT-calculated data. Further optimization of the MEAM formalism parameters may lead to better interatomic potentials for the Ti-Al system.
Intermetallic Ti-Al alloys exhibit attractive physical and mechanical properties at high temperatures relevant to turbine machinery applications. However, TiAl and Ti3Al alloys have low ductility and low fracture toughness, as well as anomalous hardening behaviour at high temperatures. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations can directly model critical atomistic mechanisms responsible for these intriguing properties, but the validity of the underlying empirical/semi-empirical interatomic potentials for such complex alloys is not clear. Here, we examine four interatomic potentials (two EAM and two MEAM) developed for the Ti-Al material system and identify their respective strength and weakness in modeling the plastic and fracture properties of the L1(0) gamma-TiAl and D0(19) alpha(2)-Ti3Al crystal structures. We compare the lattice constants, elastic constants and their temperature dependence, cohesive energies, stacking fault energies, surface decohesion and thermal expansion coefficients against available experimental and density functional theory data. In addition, we test the deformation behaviours of these potentials under uniaxial tensile loading conditions at a wide range of temperatures. Our results show that these interatomic potentials can accurately reproduce some but not the full scope of the material properties of the gamma and alpha(2) crystal structures. In particular, one MEAM potential reproduces some of the properties (some of the negative Cauchy pressure and stacking fault energies) comparable to DFT-calculated data. The results here provide guidance to select the appropriate interatomic potentials for specific applications. Our study also indicates that further optimization of the parameters in the MEAM formalism may lead to better interatomic potentials for the Ti-Al system.

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