Modeling high-entropy transition metal alloys with alchemical compression

被引:27
|
作者
Lopanitsyna, Nataliya [1 ]
Fraux, Guillaume [1 ]
Springer, Maximilian A. [2 ]
De, Sandip [2 ]
Ceriotti, Michele [1 ]
机构
[1] Ecole Polytech Fed Lausanne, Inst Mat, Lab Comp Sci & Modeling, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
[2] BASF SE, Carl Bosch Str 38, D-67056 Ludwigshafen, Germany
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
EFFICIENT ELECTROCATALYSTS; INTERATOMIC POTENTIALS; LARGE-SCALE; METHANOL; NANOPARTICLES;
D O I
10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.7.045802
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Alloys composed of several elements in roughly equimolar composition, often referred to as high-entropy alloys, have long been of interest for their thermodynamics and peculiar mechanical properties, and more recently for their potential application in catalysis. They are a considerable challenge to traditional atomistic modeling, and also to data-driven potentials that for the most part have memory footprint, computational effort, and data requirements which scale poorly with the number of elements included. We apply a recently proposed scheme to compress chemical information in a lower-dimensional space, which reduces dramatically the cost of the model with negligible loss of accuracy, to build a potential that can describe 25 d-block transition metals. The model shows semiquantitative accuracy for prototypical alloys and is remarkably stable when extrapolating to structures outside its training set. We use this framework to study element segregation in a computational experiment that simulates an equimolar alloy of all 25 elements, mimicking the seminal experiments in the groups of Yeh and Cantor, and use our observations on the short-range order relations between the elements to define a data-driven set of Hume-Rothery rules that can serve as guidance for alloy design. We conclude with a study of three prototypical alloys, CoCrFeMnNi, CoCrFeMoNi, and IrPdPtRhRu, determining their stability and the short-range order behavior of their constituents.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] High-entropy alloys in light transition metal systems
    Kozak, R.
    Steurer, W.
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA A-FOUNDATION AND ADVANCES, 2014, 70 : C943 - C943
  • [2] SHS metallurgy of high-entropy transition metal alloys
    V. N. Sanin
    V. I. Yukhvid
    D. M. Ikornikov
    D. E. Andreev
    N. V. Sachkova
    M. I. Alymov
    Doklady Physical Chemistry, 2016, 470 : 145 - 149
  • [3] SHS metallurgy of high-entropy transition metal alloys
    Sanin, V. N.
    Yukhvid, V. I.
    Ikornikov, D. M.
    Andreev, D. E.
    Sachkova, N. V.
    Alymov, M. I.
    DOKLADY PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY, 2016, 470 : 145 - 149
  • [4] Multifunctional Catalysts Based on High-Entropy Transition Metal Alloys
    Pugacheva, E. V.
    Zhuk, S. Ya.
    Bystrova, I. M.
    Romazeva, K. A.
    Ikornikov, D. M.
    Boyarchenko, O. D.
    Khomenko, N. Yu.
    Belousova, O. V.
    Sanin, V. N.
    Borshch, V. N.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SELF-PROPAGATING HIGH-TEMPERATURE SYNTHESIS, 2024, 33 (03) : 200 - 208
  • [5] Surface segregation in high-entropy alloys from alchemical machine learning
    Mazitov, Arslan
    Springer, Maximilian A.
    Lopanitsyna, Nataliya
    Fraux, Guillaume
    De, Sandip
    Ceriotti, Michele
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-MATERIALS, 2024, 7 (02):
  • [6] QUANTUM MODELING FOR HIGH-ENTROPY ALLOYS
    不详
    ADVANCED MATERIALS & PROCESSES, 2022, 180 (01): : 7 - 7
  • [7] A perspective on investigating transition metal high-entropy alloys for high-temperature applications
    Li, Meifeng
    Zhang, Hao
    Zeng, Yimin
    Liu, Jing
    ACTA MATERIALIA, 2022, 240
  • [8] Modeling the structure and thermodynamics of high-entropy alloys
    Michael Widom
    Journal of Materials Research, 2018, 33 : 2881 - 2898
  • [10] A predictive analytical model of thermal conductivity for aluminum/transition metal high-entropy alloys
    Abere, Michael J.
    Ziade, Elbara
    Lu, Ping
    Saltonstall, Christopher B.
    Gu, Xiaojun
    Wright, Wendelin J.
    Argibay, Nicolas
    Kustas, Andrew B.
    SCRIPTA MATERIALIA, 2022, 208