Diffusion in high-temperature bcc phase of IIIB-IVB metals such as Zr, Ti,
and their alloys is observed to be orders of magnitude higher than bcc metals
of group VB-VIB, including Cr, Mo, and W. The underlying reason for this higher
diffusion is still poorly understood. To explain this observation, we compare
the first-principles-calculated parameters of monovancy-mediated diffusion
between bcc Ti, Zr, and dilute Zr- Sn alloys and bcc Cr, Mo, and W. Our results
indicate that strongly anharmonic vibrations promote both the vacancy
concentration and the diffusive jump rate in bcc IVB metals and can explain
their markedly faster diffusion compared to bcc VIB metals. Additionally, we
provide an efficient approach to calculate diffusive jump rates according to
the transition state theory (TST). The use of standard harmonic TST is
impractical in bcc IIIB/IVB metals due to the existence of ill-defined harmonic
phonons, and most studies use classical or ab initio molecular dynamics for
direct simulation of diffusive jumps. Here, instead, we use a
stochastically-sampled temperature-dependent phonon analysis within the
transition state theory to study diffusive jumps without the need of direct
molecular dynamics simulations. We validate our first-principles diffusion
coefficient predictions with available experimental measurements and explain
the underlying reasons for the promotion of diffusion in bcc IVB metals/alloys
compared to bcc VIB metals.Comment: 8 figures, 1 table, 5 supplementary figures, 1 supplementary table, 1
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