Unveiling the effect of stress on vacancy diffusion isotropy at high temperature in Ni-Re Systems: Insights from atomic simulations
SC Du and SY Lin and WY Zhao and Y Ru and YL Pei and SS Li and SK Gong, MATERIALS & DESIGN, 250, 113605 (2025).
DOI: 10.1016/j.matdes.2025.113605
Stress-affected vacancy diffusion significantly impacts the element distributions in Ni-based single-crystal (SX) superalloys, determining their precipitate coarsening and creep behaviors under service conditions consequently. Rhenium (Re), as a slow-diffusing element, exhibits nonnegligible effects on the vacancy diffusion behavior varied with its atomic concentration and position particularly. In this work, we comprehensively study the vacancy diffusion behavior in Ni-Re alloys at 1173 similar to 1573 K under stress along 001 and 111, by using the Self- Evolving Atomistic Kinetic Monte Carlo (SEAKMC) method with interatomic potentials. The simulation results reveal that vacancy diffusion is isotropic under stress-free states. However, applying stress along 001 and 111 leads to vacancy diffusion anisotropy. External stress applied along 111 has a smaller effect on the lattice parameter than stress along 001. This results in less change in vacancy migration distances, leading to smaller changes in chemical bonding. Consequently, the alternation in vacancy migration barriers is less significant. This ultimately results in less disruption to the vacancy diffusion isotropy. In Ni-Re systems under external stress, temperature affects the probability of the vacancy overcoming high migration barriers while the addition of Re affects solute-vacancy binding. Typically, higher temperatures and increased Re concentrations further decrease the extent of vacancy diffusion anisotropy.
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