Trapping of He Clusters by Inert-Gas Impurities in Tungsten: First-Principles Predictions and Experimental Validation
Duc Nguyen-Manh, S.L. Dudarev

TL;DR
This study combines first-principles DFT calculations and experimental validation to investigate how inert-gas atoms and helium clusters interact with vacancies and impurities in tungsten, revealing size and electronic effects on defect properties.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of inert-gas impurity interactions with vacancies in tungsten, supported by experimental data and detailed electronic structure insights.
Findings
Inert-gas atoms prefer tetrahedral interstitial sites in tungsten.
Binding energies of helium-vacancy complexes match experimental data.
Size and electronic effects influence inert-gas defect interactions.
Abstract
Properties of point defects resulting from the incorporation of inert-gas atoms in bcc tungsten are investigated systematically using first-principles density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The most stable configuration for the interstitial neon, argon, krypton and xenon atoms is the tetrahedral site, similarly to what was found earlier for helium in W. The calculated formation energies for single inert-gas atoms at interstitial sites as well as at substitutional sites are much larger for Ne, Ar, Kr and Xe than for He. While the variation of the energy of insertion of inert-gas defects into interstitial configurations can be explained by a strong effect of their large atomic size, the trend exhibited by their substitutional energies is more likely related to the covalent interaction between the noble gas impurity atoms and the tungsten atoms. There is a remarkable variation…
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