Bcc金属中的氢簇:原子起源和强应力各向异性

J. Hou, Xiang-Shan Kong, X. Kong, Changsong Liu, Jun Song
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引用次数: 11

摘要

氢(H)引起的金属损伤一直是许多工业应用的长期困扰。这种损伤的一种形式与氢聚集有关,其原子起源仍有争议,特别是对于非氢化物形成的金属。在这项工作中,我们系统地研究了以W, Fe, Mo和Cr为代表的bcc金属中的H聚类行为,结合第一性原理计算,原子和蒙特卡罗模拟。研究表明,各向异性应力场对H的聚类是有利的,并能强烈促进H的聚类,而各向异性应力场主要是沿晶体方向的拉伸分量。我们发现,基于H形成体积张量的连续统模型可以很好地预测应力效应,并且H聚集在边缘位错处是热力学上可能的,在相当低的H浓度下形成纳米氢化物证明了这一点。此外,应力效应的各向异性在位错周围的纳米氢化物形态中得到了很好的反映,纳米氢化物以薄片状结构的形式生长,最大化了一个张力。特别是,在拉伸分量最大化的情况下,型边位错在促进H聚集方面非常有效,因此有望在bcc金属中的H聚集中发挥重要作用,与最近的实验观察结果密切一致。这项工作明确和定量地阐明了应力对氢能量学和氢聚类行为的各向异性,为理解金属中氢引起的损伤提供了关键的机制见解。
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Hydrogen Clustering in Bcc Metals: Atomic Origin and Strong Stress Anisotropy
Hydrogen (H) induced damage in metals has been a long-standing woe for many industrial applications. One form of such damage is linked to H clustering, for which the atomic origin remains contended, particularly for non-hydride forming metals. In this work, we systematically studied H clustering behavior in bcc metals represented by W, Fe, Mo, and Cr, combining first-principles calculations, atomistic and Monte Carlo simulations. H clustering has been shown to be energetically favorable, and can be strongly facilitated by anisotropic stress field, dominated by the tensile component along one of the crystalline directions. We showed that the stress effect can be well predicted by the continuum model based on H formation volume tensor, and that H clustering is thermodynamically possible at edge dislocations, evidenced by nanohydride formation at rather low levels of H concentration. Moreover, anisotropy in the stress effect is well reflected in nanohydride morphology around dislocations, with nanohydride growth occurring in the form of thin platelet structures that maximize one tension. In particular, the type edge dislocation, with the tensile component maximized, has been shown to be highly effective in facilitating H aggregation, thus expected to play an important role in H clustering in bcc metals, in close agreement with recent experimental observations. This work explicitly and quantitatively clarifies the anisotropic nature of stress effect on H energetics and H clustering behaviors, offering mechanistic insights critical towards understanding H-induced damages in metals.
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