1 research outputs found
Atomic mechanisms of self-diffusion in amorphous silicon
Based on recent calculations of the self-diffusion (SD) coefficient in
amorphous silicon (a-Si) by classical Molecular Dynamics simulation [M.
Posselt, H. Bracht, and D. Radi\'c, J. Appl. Phys. 131, 035102 (2022)] detailed
investigations on atomic mechanisms are performed. For this purpose two
Stillinger-Weber-type potentials are employed, one strongly overestimates the
SD coefficient, while the other leads to values much closer to the experimental
data. By taking into account the individual squared displacements (or diffusion
lengths) of atoms the diffusional and vibrational contributions to the total
mean squared displacement can be determined separately. It is shown that the
diffusional part is not directly correlated with the concentration of
coordination defects. The time-dependent distribution of squared displacements
of atoms indicates that in a-Si a well-defined elemental diffusion length does
not exist, in contrast to SD in the crystalline Si. The analysis of atoms with
large squared displacements reveals that the mechanisms of SD in a-Si are
characterized by complex rearrangements of bonds or exchange of neighbors.
These are mono- and bi-directional exchanges of neighbors and neighbor
replacements. Exchanges or replacements may concern up to three neighbors and
may occur in relatively short periods of some ps. Bi- or mono-directional
exchange or replacement of one neighbor atom happen more frequently than
processes including more neighbors. A comparison of results for the two
interatomic potentials shows that an increased three-body parameter only slows
down the migration, but does not change the migration mechanisms fundamentally.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figure