4.6 Article

The role of pressure and defects in the wurtzite to rock salt transition in cadmium selenide

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 14, Pages 8378-8386

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1cp05051f

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Funding

  1. UNINETT Sigma2 -the National Infrastructure for High Performance Computing and Data Storage in Norway [NN9355k, NN9718k]

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The effect of pressure and defects on the wurtzite to rock salt transition in cadmium selenide was investigated using molecular dynamics and path sampling techniques. It was found that the transition paths predominantly evolve through an intermediate 5-coordinated structure, and the presence of defects changes the transition mechanism and rate.
Using molecular dynamics and path sampling techniques we investigated the effect of pressure and defects in the wurtzite to rock salt transition in cadmium selenide (CdSe). In the pressure range 2-10 GPa, rate constants of transition are in the order of 10(-23) to 10(5) s(-1) for the transformation of a relatively small wurtzite crystal consisting of 1024 atoms with periodic boundary conditions. The transition paths predominantly evolve through an intermediate 5-coordinated structure, as reported before, though its typical lifetime within the transition paths is particularly long in the intermediate pressure range (4-6 GPa). The defects were created by removing Cd-Se pairs from an otherwise perfect crystal. The removals were either selected fully randomized or grouped in clusters (cavity creation). We find that the rate of transition due to the defects increases by several orders of magnitude even for a single pair removal. This is caused by a change in the transition mechanism that no longer proceeds via the intermediate 5-coordinated structure, when defects are present. Further, the cavity creation yields a lower rate than the fully randomized removal.

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