4.6 Article

Estimates of Quantum Tunneling Effects for Hydrogen Diffusion in PuO2

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app122111005

Keywords

plutonium oxide; Density Functional Theory; hydrogen diffusion; quantum tunneling effects

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [DE-AC52-07NA27344]

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In this study, the estimation of activation energies and quantum nuclear vibrational tunneling effects for hydrogen diffusion in PuO2 is detailed using Density Functional Theory calculations and a quantum double well approximation. The results show that the choice of exchange correlation functional has a relatively small impact. The representation of spin in the system and the use of an extended Hubbard U correction also have minimal effects on hydrogen point defect formation energies when the PuO2 lattice is held fixed at the experimental density. The study computes approximate activation energies for transitions between hydrogen interstitial sites seeded by a semi-empirical quantum model and determines the quantum tunneling enhancement relative to classical kinetic rates. The model suggests that diffusion rates in H/PuO2 systems could be significantly enhanced at ambient conditions and high temperature. This proposed method can be a useful screening tool for evaluating quantum nuclear vibrational effects in various condensed phase materials and surfaces.
We detail the estimation of activation energies and quantum nuclear vibrational tunneling effects for hydrogen diffusion in PuO2 based on Density Functional Theory calculations and a quantum double well approximation. We find that results are relatively insensitive to choice of exchange correlation functional. In addition, the representation of spin in the system and use of an extended Hubbard U correction has only a small effect on hydrogen point defect formation energies when the PuO2 lattice is held fixed at the experimental density. We then compute approximate activation energies for transitions between hydrogen interstitial sites seeded by a semi-empirical quantum model and determine the quantum tunneling enhancement relative to classical kinetic rates. Our model indicates that diffusion rates in H/PuO2 systems could be enhanced by more than one order of magnitude at ambient conditions and that these effects persist at high temperature. The method we propose here can be used as a fast screening tool for assessing possible quantum nuclear vibrational effects in any number of condensed phase materials and surfaces, where hydrogen hopping tends to follow well defined minimum energy pathways.

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