84 research outputs found
Efficient and accurate determination of lattice-vacancy diffusion coefficients via non equilibrium ab initio molecular dynamics
We revisit the color-diffusion algorithm [P. C. Aeberhard et al., Phys. Rev.
Lett. 108, 095901 (2012)] in nonequilibrium ab initio molecular dynamics
(NE-AIMD), and propose a simple efficient approach for the estimation of
monovacancy jump rates in crystalline solids at temperatures well below
melting. Color-diffusion applied to monovacancy migration entails that one
lattice atom (colored-atom) is accelerated toward the neighboring defect-site
by an external constant force F. Considering bcc molybdenum between 1000 and
2800 K as a model system, NE-AIMD results show that the colored-atom jump rate
k_{NE} increases exponentially with the force intensity F, up to F values far
beyond the linear-fitting regime employed previously. Using a simple model, we
derive an analytical expression which reproduces the observed k_{NE}(F)
dependence on F. Equilibrium rates extrapolated by NE-AIMD results are in
excellent agreement with those of unconstrained dynamics. The gain in
computational efficiency achieved with our approach increases rapidly with
decreasing temperatures, and reaches a factor of four orders of magnitude at
the lowest temperature considered in the present study
Temperature dependent effective potential method for accurate free energy calculations of solids
We have developed a thorough and accurate method of determining anharmonic
free energies, the temperature dependent effective potential technique (TDEP).
It is based on \emph{ab initio} molecular dynamics followed by a mapping onto a
model Hamiltonian that describes the lattice dynamics. The formalism and the
numerical aspects of the technique are described in details. A number of
practical examples are given, and results are presented, which confirm the
usefulness of TDEP within \emph{ab initio} and classical molecular dynamics
frameworks. In particular, we examine from first-principles the behavior of
force constants upon the dynamical stabilization of body centered phase of Zr,
and show that they become more localized. We also calculate phase diagram for
He modeled with the Aziz \emph{et al.} potential and obtain results which
are in favorable agreement both with respect to experiment and established
techniques
Lattice Thermal Conductivity of Polyethylene Molecular Crystals from First-Principles Including Nuclear Quantum Effects
Molecular crystals such as polyethylene are of intense interest as flexible thermal conductors, yet their intrinsic upper limits of thermal conductivity remain unknown. Here, we report a study of the vibrational properties and lattice thermal conductivity of a polyethylene molecular crystal using an ab initio approach that rigorously incorporates nuclear quantum motion and finite temperature effects. We obtain a thermal conductivity along the chain direction of around 160  W m^(-1) K^(-1) at room temperature, providing a firm upper bound for the thermal conductivity of this molecular crystal. Furthermore, we show that the inclusion of quantum nuclear effects significantly impacts the thermal conductivity by altering the phase space for three-phonon scattering. Our computational approach paves the way for ab initio studies and computational material discovery of molecular solids free of any adjustable parameters
Electron-Phonon Scattering in the Presence of Soft Modes and Electron Mobility in SrTiO Perovskite from First Principles
Structural phase transitions and soft phonon modes pose a longstanding
challenge to computing electron-phonon (e-ph) interactions in strongly
anharmonic crystals. Here we develop a first-principles approach to compute
e-ph scattering and charge transport in materials with anharmonic lattice
dynamics. Our approach employs renormalized phonons to compute the
temperature-dependent e-ph coupling for all phonon modes, including the soft
modes associated with ferroelectricity and phase transitions. We show that the
electron mobility in cubic SrTiO is controlled by scattering with
longitudinal optical phonons at room temperature and with ferroelectric soft
phonons below 200~K. Our calculations can accurately predict the temperature
dependence of the electron mobility in SrTiO between 150300~K, and
reveal the microscopic origin of its roughly trend. Our approach
enables first-principles calculations of e-ph interactions and charge transport
in broad classes of crystals with phase transitions and strongly anharmonic
phonons.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Updated to published versio
Anharmonicity changes the solid solubility of an alloy at high temperatures
We have developed a method to accurately and efficiently determine the
vibrational free energy as a function of temperature and volume for
substitutional alloys from first principles. Taking TiAlN alloy as
a model system, we calculate the isostructural phase diagram by finding the
global minimum of the free energy, corresponding to the true equilibrium state
of the system. We demonstrate that the anharmonic contribution and temperature
dependence of the mixing enthalpy have a decisive impact on the calculated
phase diagram of a TiAlN alloy, lowering the maximum temperature
for the miscibility gap from 6560 K to 2860 K. Our local chemical composition
measurements on thermally aged TiAlN alloys agree with the
calculated phase diagram.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, supplementary materia
Thermal conductivity in PbTe from first principles
We investigate the harmonic and anharmonic contributions to the phonon spectrum of lead telluride and perform a complete characterization of how thermal properties of PbTe evolve as temperature increases. We analyze the thermal resistivity's variation with temperature and clarify misconceptions about existing experimental literature. The resistivity initially increases sublinearly because of phase space effects and ultra strong anharmonic renormalizations of specific bands. This effect is the strongest factor in the favorable thermoelectric properties of PbTe, and it explains its limitations at higher T . This quantitative prediction opens the prospect of phonon phase space engineering to tailor the lifetimes of crucial heat carrying phonons by considering different structure or nanostructure geometries. We analyze the available scattering volume between TO and LA phonons as a function of temperature and correlate its changes to features in the thermal conductivity
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