DFT-informed Design of Radiation-Resistant Dilute Ternary Cu Alloys
Vaibhav Vasudevan (1), Thomas Schuler (2), Pascal Bellon (1), Robert Averback (1) ((1) Materials Research Laboratory, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, (2) Universit\'e Paris-Saclay, CEA, Service de recherche en Corrosion et Comportement des Mat\'eriaux, SRMP

TL;DR
This paper develops a high-throughput computational framework using DFT to design radiation-resistant dilute ternary copper alloys by adding solutes that bind to vacancies and reduce their mobility, enhancing alloy durability.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel DFT-based screening method for identifying synergistic solute pairs that improve radiation resistance in copper alloys.
Findings
Identification of Zr-Co as a promising alloy pair
Strong Zr-'C' binding reduces vacancy mobility
Disruption of kinetic circuits decreases solute drag
Abstract
This research establishes a systematic, high-throughput computational framework for designing radiation-resistant, dilute ternary copper-based alloys by addition of solutes that bind to vacancies and reduce their mobility, thus promoting interstitial-vacancy recombination. The first challenge in developing alloys by this method is mitigating the vacancy-mediated solute drag effect, since density functional theory (DFT) calculations show that solutes that bind strongly to vacancies are also rapidly dragged to point-defect sinks, and thus removed from the matrix. To overcome this issue, two types of solutes are added to the Cu matrix: A first solute with a strong vacancy binding energy (B-type species) and another solute that binds to 'B' and is a slow diffuser in Cu (C-type species). Using DFT, 21 synergistic solute pairs are screened, with 'B'=Zr, Ge, Sn and 'C'=Fe, Co, Mo, Ni, Nb, W,…
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