MRS Meetings and Events

 

SF01.13.01 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

First-Principles Calculations of Structural Transitions within Multi-Principal Component Transition Metal Carbides

When and Where

Apr 26, 2024
8:30am - 9:00am

Terrace Suite 1, Level 4, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Theresa Davey1,2,Ying Chen2

Bangor University1,Tohoku University2

Abstract

Theresa Davey1,2,Ying Chen2

Bangor University1,Tohoku University2
High-entropy or multi-principal component ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs), such as rocksalt structured MC<sub>1-x</sub> (where the cation M is an equiatomic or non-equiatomic mixture of metallic elements including Ti, Zr, Hf, Nb, and Ta, and the anion C is carbon), have recently generated significant interest due to their potential improved or tuneable properties such as melting point, hardness, ductility, and oxidation resistance. The single metallic element UHTC carbides, such as zirconium carbide, are known to have a wide range of stoichiometry facilitated by significant numbers of carbon vacancies (up to around 50% of the carbon atoms), where in different parts of the phase space, the vacancies exhibit long-range ordering, short-range ordering, or are randomly distributed. Until now, there have been no systematic investigations varying carbon stoichiometry in multi-principal cation carbides, either experimentally or theoretically.<br/><br/>Individually, all the MC<sub>1-x</sub> carbides have a tendency to form long-range vacancy-ordered phases at low temperature, although these are extremely challenging to experimentally synthesise. In single cation transition metal carbides (e.g. ZrC<sub>1-x, </sub>HfC<sub>1-x</sub>), the short- and long-range carbon vacancy ordering is driven by differing local bonding surrounding different vacancy cluster configurations. However, similar but slightly different trends are observed in group IV and group V transition metal carbides, resulting in different symmetries, for example low temperature M<sub>2</sub>C (M = Ti, Zr, Hf) has a cubic Fd-3m structure, whereas M<sub>2</sub>C (M=Ta) has a trigonal P-3m1 structure.<br/><br/>This work uses first-principles calculations to explore multiatomic mixing (binary, ternary, quaternary, and quinary) on the metallic element lattice at different carbon stoichiometries. Within this, disordered vacancies, and various vacancy-ordered structures were considered. Special Quasirandom Structures (SQS) were generated for each composition, to provide a supercell approximation of random mixing. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations were used to obtain the ground state energy and structural and electronic properties. The atomic bonding is investigated, and trends are identified by considering the local atomic environments and cluster configurations.<br/><br/>The effects that the multi-principal cation lattice has on the carbon vacancy ordering on the anion lattice are explored, at absolute zero and considering finite temperature effects. The most stable crystal structures are identified for various multi-cation systems at different carbon stoichiometries. Miscible and immiscible mixtures are identified, where approximate temperatures of miscibility gaps are determined using the Bragg-Williams configurational entropy approximation for ideal mixtures. The tendency for phase separation is compared in equivalent composition multi-cation vacancy-disordered and vacancy-ordered carbides. Approximate order-disorder transition temperatures are obtained for mixed-cation substoichiometric carbides and compared with the miscibility gaps in the same system. On this basis, the possibility of synthesising certain vacancy-ordered multi-principal cation compounds is revealed, alongside the required range of synthesis temperatures.

Keywords

ceramic | crystallographic structure

Symposium Organizers

Ben Breitung, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Alannah Hallas, The University of British Columbia
Scott McCormack, University of California, Davis
T. Zac Ward, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature