Physical Review Materials | 2021

Investigating the electronic origins of the repulsion between substitutional and interstitial solutes in hcp Ti

 
 
 

Abstract


The high solubility of oxygen in Ti, Zr and Hf makes it di cult to stabilize the protective oxide scales on their surfaces as the subsurface regions can serve as boundless sinks that continuously dissolve oxygen. Alloying elements are crucial to reduce the oxygen solubility and di usivity within early transition metals. Past studies have shown that substitutional alloying additions to titanium repel interstitial oxygen. Here we use rst-principles calculations to show that this repulsion is short ranged and identify a variety of factors that are likely responsible for the repulsive interaction. We identify a unique hybridization phenomenon between dissolved substitutional elements and interstitial oxygen within hcp Ti that leads to a repulsive interaction at short distances, similar to that between closed-shell atoms. Calculations of Bader charges also suggest the existence of short-range Coulomb interactions due to the accumulation of charge on the substitutional solute and interstitial oxygen that is drawn from the Ti host.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.5.073604
Language English
Journal Physical Review Materials

Full Text