Valence electron concentration- and N vacancy-induced elasticity in cubic early transition metal nitrides
Soheil Karimi Aghda, Dimitri Bogdanovski, Lukas Loefler, Heng Han Sua,, Lena Patterer, Damian M. Holzapfel, Arnaud le Febvrier, Marcus Hans, Daniel, Primetzhofer, and Jochen M. Schneider

TL;DR
This study combines density functional theory calculations and experiments to investigate how nitrogen vacancies and valence electron concentration influence the elastic properties of cubic transition metal nitrides, revealing vacancy-induced elasticity variations.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of vacancy effects on elasticity in TMNx nitrides, validated by experimental data, highlighting the role of valence electron concentration and bonding changes.
Findings
N-vacancies can increase or decrease elastic modulus depending on the metal
Experimental validation shows N-content reduction leads to elastic modulus increase in VNx
Elastic anisotropy and bonding changes explain vacancy-induced elasticity variations
Abstract
Motivated by frequently reported deviations from stoichiometry in cubic transition metal nitride (TMNx) thin films, the effect of N-vacancy concentration on the elastic properties of cubic TiNx, ZrNx, VNx, NbNx, and MoNx (0.72<x<1.00) is systematically studied by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The predictions are validated experimentally for VNx (0.77<x<0.97). The DFT results indicate that the elastic behavior of the TMNx depends on both the N-vacancy concentration and the valence electron concentration (VEC) of the transition metal: While TiNx and ZrNx exhibit vacancy-induced reductions in elastic modulus, VNx and NbNx show an increase. These trends can be rationalized by considering vacancy-induced changes in elastic anisotropy and bonding. While introduction of N-vacancies in TiNx results in a significant reduction of elastic modulus along all directions and a lower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetal and Thin Film Mechanics · Advanced ceramic materials synthesis · MXene and MAX Phase Materials
