Boron carbide, used as a neutron absorber, undergoes nuclear reactions producing relevant quantities of He. The understanding of He kinetics at the atomic scale in the material is still in its infancy, in spite of decades of experimental work devoted to the characterization of He containing, irradiated, boron carbide samples. The interplay of He itself with intrinsic defects created by irradiation on kinetics is still almost completely unknown. In this paper we present an exhaustive study of vacancies and substitutional helium impurities in boron carbide using Density Functional Theory. Analyzing the stability and mobility of these defects allows us to consider diffusion mechanisms other than the known interstitial mechanisms. We find that vacancies trap He interstitials, raising the activation energy of 2D diffusion to approximately 2 eV. The trapping mechanism is different according to the charge state of the vacancy : in p-type conditions, when vacancies are neutral or positive, He diffuses via a dissociative mechanisms and is trapped in a substitutional position; in n-type conditions, negative vacancies trap He atoms traveling in an adjacent {111} plane by a charge transfer driven distorsion. No favorable vacancy assisted diffusion mechanism was identified for substitutional He atoms, except the dissociative one previously mentioned. Other possible vacancy diffusion mechanisms, which we also analyzed, are hindered by the high activation energy of vacancy self-diffusion.
Boron carbide, a lightweight, high temperature material, has various applications as a structural material and as a neutron absorber. The large solubility range of carbon in boron, between ≈ 9 % and 20 %, has been theoretically explained by some of us by the thermodynamical stability of three icosahedral phases at low temperature, with respective carbon atomic concentrations: 8.7 % (B 10.5 C, named OPO 1 ), 13.0 % (B 6.7 C, named OPO 2 ), whose theoretical Raman spectra are still unknown, and 20 % (B 4 C), from which the nature of some of the Raman peaks are still debated. We report theoretical and experimental results of the first order, non-resonant, Raman spectrum of boron carbide. Density functional perturbation theory enables us to obtain the Raman spectra of the OPO 1 and OPO 2 phases, which are perfectly ordered structures with however a complex crystalline motif of 414 atoms, due to charge compensation effects. Moreover, for the carbon-rich B 4 C, with a simpler 15-atom unit cell, we study the influence of the low energy point defects and of their concentrations on the Raman spectrum, in connection with experiments, thus providing insights into the sensitivity of experimental spectra to sample preparation, experimental conditions and setup. In particular, this enables us to propose a new structure at 19.2 % atomic carbon concentration, B 4.2 C, that, within the local density approximation of density functional theory (DFT-LDA), lies very close to the convex hull of boron carbide, on the carbon-rich side. This new phase, derived from what we name the "3+1" defect complex, helps in reconciling the experimentally observed Raman spectrum with the theory around 1000 cm −1 . Finally, we predict the intensity variations induced by the experimental geometry and quantitavely assess the localisation of bulk and defect vibrational modes and their arXiv:2105.02321v1 [cond-mat.mtrl-sci] 5 May 2021 character, with an analysis of "chain" and "icosahedral" modes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.