# Spontaneous formation of thermodynamically stable Al--Cu--Fe icosahedral   quasicrystal from realistic atomistic simulations

**Authors:** Marek Mihalkovic, Michael Widom

arXiv: 1908.03417 · 2020-03-04

## TL;DR

This study demonstrates the spontaneous formation of thermodynamically stable Al--Cu--Fe icosahedral quasicrystals from atomistic simulations, revealing detailed structural and energetic insights into their stability and formation mechanisms.

## Contribution

It introduces a realistic atomistic simulation approach that captures the spontaneous formation and stability of Al--Cu--Fe quasicrystals, including detailed free energy analysis.

## Key findings

- Quasicrystals form spontaneously from melt in simulations.
- Structures are within 2 meV/atom of competing phases.
- Quasicrystals are stable above 600K due to vibrational and electronic contributions.

## Abstract

Icosahedral quasicrystals spontaneously form from the melt in simulations of Al--Cu--Fe alloys. We model the interatomic interactions using oscillating pair potentials tuned to the specific alloy system based on a database of density functional theory (DFT)-derived energies and forces. Favored interatomic separations align with the geometry of icosahedral motifs that overlap to create face-centered icosahedral order on a hierarchy of length scales. Molecular dynamics simulations, supplemented with Monte Carlo steps to swap chemical species, efficiently sample the configuration space of our models, which reach up to 9846 atoms. Exchanging temperatures of independent trajectories (replica exchange) allows us to achieve thermal equilibrium at low temperatures. By optimizing structure and composition we create structures whose DFT energies reach to within $\sim$2 meV/atom of the energies of competing crystal phases. Free energies obtained by adding contributions due to harmonic and anharmonic vibrations, chemical substitution disorder, phasons, and electronic excitations, show that the quasicrystal becomes stable against competing phases at temperatures above 600K. The average structure can be described succinctly as a cut through atomic surfaces in six-dimensional space that reveal specific patterns of preferred chemical occupancy. Atomic surface regions of mixed chemical occupation demonstrate the proliferation of phason fluctuations, which can be observed in real space through the formation, dissolution and reformation of large scale icosahedral motifs -- a picture that is hidden from diffraction refinements due to averaging over the disorder and consequent loss of information concerning occupancy correlations.

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.03417/full.md

## Figures

12 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.03417/full.md

## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.03417/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1908.03417