4.4 Article

One-dimensional atomic transport by clusters of self-interstitial atoms in iron and copper

Journal

PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE
Volume 83, Issue 1, Pages 61-91

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/0141861021000016793

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Atomic-scale computer simulation has been used to study the thermally activated atomic transport of self-interstitial atoms (SIAs) in the form of planar clusters in pure Cu and alpha-Fe. There is strong evidence that such clusters are commonly formed in metals during irradiation with high-energy particles and play an important role in accumulation and spatial distribution of surviving defects. An extensive study of the mobility of SIA clusters containing two to 331 interstitials has been carried out using the molecular dynamics simulation technique for the temperature range from 180 to 1200 K. The results obtained show that clusters larger than three to four SIAs are one-dimensionally mobile in both Cu and Fe. Large clusters of more than 100 SIAs in Cu and 300 SIAs in Fe have significantly reduced mobility. The problem of describing one-dimensional (1D) motion in three-dimensional space is discussed. An attempt is made to describe the mobility of SIA clusters within the approximation of ID diffusion. For clusters in both metals the effective migration energy of ID diffusion as estimated-via the jump frequency of the cluster centre of mass is found to be independent of the number of SIAs in the clusters, although the cluster jump frequency decreases with increasing cluster size. Mechanisms of ID mobility of interstitial clusters are discussed.

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