Atomistic Mechanisms of Binary Alloy Surface Segregation From Nanoseconds to Seconds Using Accelerated Dynamics

25 Pages Posted: 13 Nov 2021

See all articles by Richard B. Garza

Richard B. Garza

University of Pittsburgh

Jiyoung Lee

University of Texas at Austin

Mai H. Nguyen

University of Texas at Austin

Andrew Garmon

Clemson University

Danny Perez

Government of the United States of America - Theoretical Division

Meng Li

University of Pittsburgh

Judith C. Yang

University of Pittsburgh

Graeme Henkelman

University of Texas at Austin

Wissam Abdo Saidi

University of Pittsburgh - Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science

Abstract

Although the equilibrium composition of many alloy surfaces is well understood, the rate of transient surface segregation during annealing is not known, despite its crucial effect on alloy corrosion and catalytic reactions occurring on overlapping timescales. In this work, CuNi bimetallic alloys representing (100) surface facets are annealed in vacuum using atomistic simulations to observe the effect of vacancy diffusion on surface separation. We employ multi-timescale methods to sample the early transient, intermediate, and equilibrium states of slab surfaces during the separation process, including standard MD as well as three methods to perform atomistic, long-time dynamics: parallel trajectory splicing (ParSplice), adaptive kinetic Monte Carlo (AKMC), and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC). From nanosecond (ns) to second timescales, our multiscale computational methodology can observe rare stochastic events not typically seen with standard MD, closing the gap between computational and experimental timescales for surface segregation. Rapid diffusion of a vacancy to the slab is resolved by all four methods in tens of ns. Stochastic re-entry of vacancies into the subsurface, however, is only seen on the microsecond timescale in the two KMC methods. Kinetic vacancy trapping on the surface and its effect on the segregation rate are discussed. The equilibrium composition profile of CuNi after segregation during annealing is estimated to occur on a timescale of seconds as determined by KMC, a result directly comparable to nanoscale experiments.

Suggested Citation

Garza, Richard B. and Lee, Jiyoung and Nguyen, Mai H. and Garmon, Andrew and Perez, Danny and Li, Meng and Yang, Judith C. and Henkelman, Graeme and Saidi, Wissam Abdo, Atomistic Mechanisms of Binary Alloy Surface Segregation From Nanoseconds to Seconds Using Accelerated Dynamics. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3962656 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3962656

Richard B. Garza

University of Pittsburgh ( email )

135 N Bellefield Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
United States

Jiyoung Lee

University of Texas at Austin ( email )

2317 Speedway
Austin, TX Texas 78712
United States

Mai H. Nguyen

University of Texas at Austin ( email )

Texas
United States

Andrew Garmon

Clemson University ( email )

101 Sikes Ave
Clemson, SC 29634
United States

Danny Perez

Government of the United States of America - Theoretical Division ( email )

Los Alamos, NM 87545
United States

Meng Li

University of Pittsburgh ( email )

135 N Bellefield Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
United States

Judith C. Yang

University of Pittsburgh ( email )

135 N Bellefield Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
United States

Graeme Henkelman

University of Texas at Austin ( email )

2317 Speedway
Austin, TX Texas 78712
United States

Wissam Abdo Saidi (Contact Author)

University of Pittsburgh - Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science ( email )

636 Benedum Hall
PIttsburgh, PA 15621
United States

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