Repository logoOPUS - Online Publications of University Stuttgart
de / en
Log In
New user? Click here to register.Have you forgotten your password?
Communities & Collections
All of DSpace
  1. Home
  2. Browse by Author

Browsing by Author "Körmann, Fritz"

Filter results by typing the first few letters
Now showing 1 - 13 of 13
  • Results Per Page
  • Sort Options
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Ab initio phase stabilities and mechanical properties of multicomponent alloys: a comprehensive review for high entropy alloys and compositionally complex alloys
    (2019) Ikeda, Yuji; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz
    Multicomponent alloys with multiple principal elements including high entropy alloys (HEAs) and compositionally complex alloys (CCAs) are attracting rapidly growing attention. The endless possibilities to explore new alloys and the hope for better combinations of materials properties have stimulated a remarkable number of research works in the last years. Most of these works have been based on experimental approaches, but ab initio calculations have emerged as a powerful approach that complements experiment and serves as a predictive tool for the identification and characterization of promising alloys. The theoretical ab initio modeling of phase stabilities and mechanical properties of multi-principal element alloys by means of density functional theory (DFT) is reviewed. A general thermodynamic framework is laid down that provides a bridge between the quantities accessible with DFT and the targeted thermodynamic and mechanical properties. It is shown how chemical disorder and various finite-temperature excitations can be modeled with DFT. Different concepts to study crystal and alloy phase stabilities, the impact of lattice distortions (a core effect of HEAs), magnetic transitions, and chemical short-range order are discussed along with specific examples. Strategies to study elastic properties, stacking fault energies, and their dependence on, e.g., temperature or alloy composition are illustrated. Finally, we provide an extensive compilation of multi-principal element alloys and various material properties studied with DFT so far (a set of over 500 alloy-property combinations).
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Accurate electronic free energies of the 3d, 4d, and 5d transition metals at high temperatures
    (2017) Zhang, Xi; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz; Freysoldt, Christoph; Neugebauer, Jörg
    Free energies of bulk materials are nowadays routinely computed by density functional theory. In particular for metals, electronic excitations can significantly contribute to the free energy. For an ideal static lattice, this contribution can be obtained at low computational cost, e.g., from the electronic density of states derived at T = 0 K or by utilizing the Sommerfeld approximation. The error introduced by these approximations at elevated temperatures is rarely known. The error arising from the ideal lattice approximation is likewise unexplored but computationally much more challenging to overcome. In order to shed light on these issues we have computed the electronic free energies for all 3d, 4d, and 5d transition elements on the ideal lattices of the bcc, fcc, and hcp structures using finite-temperature density-functional theory. For a subset of elements we have explored the impact of explicit thermal vibrations on the electronic free energies by using ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. We provide an analysis of the observed chemical trends in terms of the electronic density of states and the canonical d band model and quantify the errors in the approximate methods. The electronic contribution to the heat capacities and the corresponding errors due to the different approximations are studied as well.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Anharmonicity in bcc refractory elements : a detailed ab initio analysis
    (2023) Srinivasan, Prashanth; Shapeev, Alexander; Neugebauer, Jörg; Körmann, Fritz; Grabowski, Blazej
    Explicit anharmonicity, defined as the vibrational contribution beyond the quasiharmonic approximation, is qualitatively different between the group V and group VI bcc refractory elements. Group V elements show a small and mostly negative anharmonic entropy, whereas group VI elements have a large positive anharmonic entropy, strongly increasing with temperature. Here, we explain this difference utilizing highly accurate anharmonic free energies and entropies from ab initio calculations for Nb and Ta (group V), and Mo and W (group VI). The numerically calculated entropies are in agreement with prior experimental data. The difference in behavior between the two sets of elements arises not from their high-temperature behavior but rather from the 0K quasiharmonic reference state. We understand this by analyzing the 0K and the high-temperature phonon density of states and the electronic density of states. The qualitative difference disappears when the anharmonicity is instead referenced with a high-temperature effective harmonic potential. However, even for an optimized effective harmonic reference, the remaining effective anharmonicity is significant. The reason is that the anharmonicity in the bcc systems - carried by asymmetric distributions in the nearest neighbors - can never be accounted for by a harmonically restricted potential.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Anomalous phonon lifetime shortening in paramagnetic CrN caused by spin-lattice coupling: a combined spin and ab Initio molecular dynamics study
    (2018) Stockem, Irina; Bergman, Anders; Glensk, Albert; Hickel, Tilmann; Körmann, Fritz; Grabowski, Blazej; Neugebauer, Jörg; Alling, Björn
    We study the mutual coupling of spin fluctuations and lattice vibrations in paramagnetic CrN by combining atomistic spin dynamics and ab initio molecular dynamics. The two degrees of freedom are dynamically coupled, leading to nonadiabatic effects. Those effects suppress the phonon lifetimes at low temperature compared to an adiabatic approach. The dynamic coupling identified here provides an explanation for the experimentally observed unexpected temperature dependence of the thermal conductivity of magnetic semiconductors above the magnetic ordering temperature.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Chemically induced local lattice distortions versus structural phase transformations in compositionally complex alloys
    (2021) Ikeda, Yuji; Gubaev, Konstantin; Neugebauer, Jörg; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz
    Recent experiments show that the chemical composition of body-centered cubic (bcc) refractory high entropy alloys (HEAs) can be tuned to enable transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP), which significantly improves the ductility of these alloys. This calls for an accurate and efficient method to map the structural stability as a function of composition. A key challenge for atomistic simulations is to separate the structural transformation between the bcc and the ω phases from the intrinsic local lattice distortions in such chemically disordered alloys. To solve this issue, we develop a method that utilizes a symmetry analysis to detect differences in the crystal structures. Utilizing this method in combination with ab initio calculations, we demonstrate that local lattice distortions largely affect the phase stability of Ti-Zr-Hf-Ta and Ti-Zr-Nb-Hf-Ta HEAs. If relaxation effects are properly taken into account, the predicted compositions near the bcc–hcp energetic equilibrium are close to the experimental compositions, for which good strength and ductility due to the TRIP effect are observed.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Correlation analysis of strongly fluctuating atomic volumes, charges, and stresses in body-centered cubic refractory high-entropy alloys
    (2020) Ishibashi, Shoji; Ikeda, Yuji; Körmann, Fritz; Grabowski, Blazej; Neugebauer, Jörg
    Local lattice distortions in a series of body-centered cubic alloys, including refractory high-entropy alloys, are investigated by means of atomic volumes, atomic charges, and atomic stresses defined by the Bader charge analysis based on first-principles calculations. Analyzing the extensive data sets, we find large distributions of these atomic properties for each element in each alloy, indicating a large impact of the varying local chemical environments. We show that these local-environment effects can be well understood and captured already by the first and the second nearest neighbor shells. Based on this insight, we employ linear regression models up to the second nearest neighbor shell to accurately predict these atomic properties. Finally, we find that the elementwise-averaged values of the atomic properties correlate linearly with the averaged valence-electron concentration of the considered alloys.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Finite-temperature interplay of structural stability, chemical complexity, and elastic properties of bcc multicomponent alloys from ab initio trained machine-learning potentials
    (2021) Gubaev, Konstantin; Ikeda, Yuji; Tasnádi, Ferenc; Neugebauer, Jörg; Shapeev, Alexander V.; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz
    An active learning approach to train machine-learning interatomic potentials (moment tensor potentials) for multicomponent alloys to ab initio data is presented. Employing this approach, the disordered body-centered cubic (bcc) TiZrHfTax system with varying Ta concentration is investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. Our results show a strong interplay between elastic properties and the structural ω phase stability, strongly affecting the mechanical properties. Based on these insights we systematically screen composition space for regimes where elastic constants show little or no temperature dependence (elinvar effect).
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Magnetic Moment Tensor Potentials for collinear spin-polarized materials reproduce different magnetic states of bcc Fe
    (2022) Novikov, Ivan; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz; Shapeev, Alexander
    We present the magnetic Moment Tensor Potentials (mMTPs), a class of machine-learning interatomic potentials, accurately reproducing both vibrational and magnetic degrees of freedom as provided, e.g., from first-principles calculations. The accuracy is achieved by a two-step minimization scheme that coarse-grains the atomic and the spin space. The performance of the mMTPs is demonstrated for the prototype magnetic system bcc iron, with applications to phonon calculations for different magnetic states, and molecular-dynamics simulations with fluctuating magnetic moments.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Performance of the standard exchange-correlation functionals in predicting melting properties fully from first principles: application to Al and magnetic Ni
    (2020) Zhu, Li-Fang; Körmann, Fritz; Ruban, Andrei V.; Neugebauer, Jörg; Grabowski, Blazej
    We apply the efficient two-optimized references thermodynamic integration using Langevin dynamics method [Phys. Rev. B 96, 224202 (2017)] to calculate highly accurate melting properties of Al and magnetic Ni from first principles. For Ni we carefully investigate the impact of magnetism on the liquid and solid free energies including longitudinal spin fluctuations and the reverse influence of atomic vibrations on magnetic properties. We show that magnetic fluctuations are effectively canceling out for both phases and are thus not altering the predicted melting temperature. For both elements, the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) and the local-density approximation (LDA) are used for the exchange-correlation functional revealing a reliable ab initio confidence interval capturing the respective experimental melting point, enthalpy of fusion, and entropy of fusion.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Strong impact of lattice vibrations on electronic and magnetic properties of paramagnetic Fe revealed by disordered local moments molecular dynamics
    (2016) Alling, Björn; Körmann, Fritz; Grabowski, Blazej; Glensk, Albert; Abrikosov, Igor A.; Neugebauer, Jörg
    We study the impact of lattice vibrations on magnetic and electronic properties of paramagnetic bcc and fcc iron at finite temperature, employing the disordered local moments molecular dynamics (DLM-MD) method. Vibrations strongly affect the distribution of local magnetic moments at finite temperature, which in turn correlates with the local atomic volumes. Without the explicit consideration of atomic vibrations, the mean local magnetic moment and mean field derived magnetic entropy of paramagnetic bcc Fe are larger compared to paramagnetic fcc Fe, which would indicate that the magnetic contribution stabilizes the bcc phase at high temperatures. In the present study we show that this assumption is not valid when the coupling between vibrations and magnetism is taken into account. At the γ-δ transition temperature (1662 K), the lattice distortions cause very similar magnetic moments of both bcc and fcc structures and hence magnetic entropy contributions. This finding can be traced back to the electronic densities of states, which also become increasingly similar between bcc and fcc Fe with increasing temperature. Given the sensitive interplay of the different physical excitation mechanisms, our results illustrate the need for an explicit consideration of vibrational disorder and its impact on electronic and magnetic properties to understand paramagnetic Fe. Furthermore, they suggest that at the γ-δ transition temperature electronic and magnetic contributions to the Gibbs free energy are extremely similar in bcc and fcc Fe.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Temperature dependence of the Gibbs energy of vacancy formation of fcc Ni
    (2018) Gong, Yilun; Grabowski, Blazej; Glensk, Albert; Körmann, Fritz; Neugebauer, Jörg; Reed, Roger C.
    Quantum-mechanical calculations are used to determine the temperature dependence of the Gibbs energy of vacancy formation in nickel. Existing data reveal a discrepancy between the high-temperature estimates from experiments and low-temperature approximations from density functional theory. Our finite-temperature calculations - which include the effects of magnetism and fully interacting phonon vibrations - demonstrate that this discrepancy is mostly caused by the previously neglected explicit anharmonic contribution.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Temperature dependence of the stacking-fault Gibbs energy for Al, Cu, and Ni
    (2018) Zhang, Xi; Grabowski, Blazej; Körmann, Fritz; Ruban, Andrei V.; Gong, Yilun; Reed, Roger C.; Hickel, Tilmann; Neugebauer, Jörg
    The temperature-dependent intrinsic stacking fault Gibbs energy is computed based on highly converged density-functional-theory (DFT) calculations for the three prototype face-centered cubic metals Al, Cu, and Ni. All relevant temperature-dependent contributions are considered including electronic, vibrational, magnetic, and explicit anharmonic Gibbs energy contributions as well as coupling terms employing state-of-the-art statistical sampling techniques. Particular emphasis is put on a careful comparison of different theoretical concepts to derive the stacking fault energy such as the axial-next-nearest-neighbor-Ising (ANNNI) model or the vacuum-slab approach. Our theoretical results are compared with an extensive set of previous theoretical and experimental data. Large uncertainties in the experimental data highlight the necessity of complementary parameter-free calculations. Specifically, the temperature dependence is experimentally unknown and poorly described by thermodynamic databases. Whereas calphad derived data shows an increase of the stacking fault energy with temperature for two of the systems (Cu and Ni), our results predict a decrease for all studied systems. For Ni, the temperature induced change is in fact so strong that in the temperature interval relevant for super-alloy applications the stacking fault energy falls below one third of the low temperature value. Such large changes clearly call for a revision of the stacking fault energy when modeling or designing alloys based on such elements.
  • Thumbnail Image
    ItemOpen Access
    Thermodynamics up to the melting point in a TaVCrW high entropy alloy : systematic ab initio study aided by machine learning potentials
    (2022) Zhou, Ying; Srinivasan, Prashanth; Körmann, Fritz; Grabowski, Blazej; Smith, Roger; Goddard, Pooja; Duff, Andrew Ian
    Multi-principal-component alloys have attracted great interest as a novel paradigm in alloy design, with often unique properties and a vast compositional space auspicious for materials discovery. High entropy alloys (HEAs) belong to this class and are being investigated for prospective nuclear applications with reported superior mechanical properties including high-temperature strength and stability compared to conventional alloys. Computational materials design has the potential to play a key role in screening such alloys, yet for high-temperature properties, challenges remain in finding an appropriate balance between accuracy and computational cost. Here we develop an approach based on density-functional theory (DFT) and thermodynamic integration aided by machine learning based interatomic potential models to address this challenge. We systematically evaluate and compare the efficiency of computing the full free energy surface and thermodynamic properties up to the melting point at different stages of the thermodynamic integration scheme. Our new approach provides a ×4 speed-up with respect to comparable free energy approaches at the level of DFT, with errors on high-temperature free energy predictions less than 1 meV/atom. Calculations are performed on an equiatomic HEA, TaVCrW - a low-activation composition and therefore of potential interest for next generation fission and fusion reactors.
OPUS
  • About OPUS
  • Publish with OPUS
  • Legal information
DSpace
  • Cookie settings
  • Privacy policy
  • Send Feedback
University Stuttgart
  • University Stuttgart
  • University Library Stuttgart