Thermoelastic Properties Of The Ti2AlC MAX Phase: An Ab Initio Study
Bill Clintone Oyomo, Leah Wairimu Mungai, Geoffrey Arusei, Michael Atambo, Mirriam Chepkoech, Nicholas Makau, George Amolo

TL;DR
This study uses first-principles calculations to analyze how the elastic properties of Ti2AlC MAX phase degrade under high temperature and pressure, providing valuable data for industrial applications.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed dynamical analysis of Ti2AlC under varying conditions, highlighting elastic moduli reductions due to anharmonic lattice effects.
Findings
Bulk and shear moduli decrease by 15-29% and 13-31% respectively at high pressure and temperature.
Elastic moduli degradation is attributed to anharmonic lattice effects causing thermal softening.
Lattice parameters remain relatively unchanged under studied conditions.
Abstract
MAX phases are used on an industrial scale in the transportation, armour, and furnace development sectors, among others. However, data on the dynamical properties of these materials under varying temperature and pressure conditions are rare or unavailable. This study reports on the dynamical properties of the elastic constants of Ti2AlC, under these conditions, obtained from first-principles calculations. Both static and dynamical results are presented and discussed. The dynamical results show that the elastic moduli are degraded; specifically, the bulk and shear moduli show a reduction ranging from 15 to 29% and 13 to 31%, respectively, between pressures of 10 - 30 GPa and in the temperature range of 300 - 1200 K. The reduction in these moduli is likely caused by anharmonic lattice effects that lead to thermal-induced softening, particularly in the high-pressure and temperature range.…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
