Cargando…

The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal

On the basis of ab initio computer simulations, pre-melting phenomena have been suggested to occur in the elastic properties of hexagonal close-packed iron under the conditions of the Earth’s inner core just before melting. The extent to which these pre-melting effects might also occur in the physic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pamato, Martha G., Wood, Ian G., Dobson, David P., Hunt, Simon A., Vočadlo, Lidunka
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Union of Crystallography 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29657568
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600576718002248
_version_ 1783311817924149248
author Pamato, Martha G.
Wood, Ian G.
Dobson, David P.
Hunt, Simon A.
Vočadlo, Lidunka
author_facet Pamato, Martha G.
Wood, Ian G.
Dobson, David P.
Hunt, Simon A.
Vočadlo, Lidunka
author_sort Pamato, Martha G.
collection PubMed
description On the basis of ab initio computer simulations, pre-melting phenomena have been suggested to occur in the elastic properties of hexagonal close-packed iron under the conditions of the Earth’s inner core just before melting. The extent to which these pre-melting effects might also occur in the physical properties of face-centred cubic metals has been investigated here under more experimentally accessible conditions for gold, allowing for comparison with future computer simulations of this material. The thermal expansion of gold has been determined by X-ray powder diffraction from 40 K up to the melting point (1337 K). For the entire temperature range investigated, the unit-cell volume can be represented in the following way: a second-order Grüneisen approximation to the zero-pressure volumetric equation of state, with the internal energy calculated via a Debye model, is used to represent the thermal expansion of the ‘perfect crystal’. Gold shows a nonlinear increase in thermal expansion that departs from this Grüneisen–Debye model prior to melting, which is probably a result of the generation of point defects over a large range of temperatures, beginning at T/T (m) > 0.75 (a similar homologous T to where softening has been observed in the elastic moduli of Au). Therefore, the thermodynamic theory of point defects was used to include the additional volume of the vacancies at high temperatures (‘real crystal’), resulting in the following fitted parameters: Q = (V (0) K (0))/γ = 4.04 (1) × 10(−18) J, V (0) = 67.1671 (3) Å(3), b = (K (0)′ − 1)/2 = 3.84 (9), θ(D) = 182 (2) K, (v (f)/Ω)exp(s (f)/k (B)) = 1.8 (23) and h (f) = 0.9 (2) eV, where V (0) is the unit-cell volume at 0 K, K (0) and K (0)′ are the isothermal incompressibility and its first derivative with respect to pressure (evaluated at zero pressure), γ is a Grüneisen parameter, θ (D) is the Debye temperature, v (f), h (f) and s (f) are the vacancy formation volume, enthalpy and entropy, respectively, Ω is the average volume per atom, and k (B) is Boltzmann’s constant.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5884389
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher International Union of Crystallography
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58843892018-04-13 The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal Pamato, Martha G. Wood, Ian G. Dobson, David P. Hunt, Simon A. Vočadlo, Lidunka J Appl Crystallogr Research Papers On the basis of ab initio computer simulations, pre-melting phenomena have been suggested to occur in the elastic properties of hexagonal close-packed iron under the conditions of the Earth’s inner core just before melting. The extent to which these pre-melting effects might also occur in the physical properties of face-centred cubic metals has been investigated here under more experimentally accessible conditions for gold, allowing for comparison with future computer simulations of this material. The thermal expansion of gold has been determined by X-ray powder diffraction from 40 K up to the melting point (1337 K). For the entire temperature range investigated, the unit-cell volume can be represented in the following way: a second-order Grüneisen approximation to the zero-pressure volumetric equation of state, with the internal energy calculated via a Debye model, is used to represent the thermal expansion of the ‘perfect crystal’. Gold shows a nonlinear increase in thermal expansion that departs from this Grüneisen–Debye model prior to melting, which is probably a result of the generation of point defects over a large range of temperatures, beginning at T/T (m) > 0.75 (a similar homologous T to where softening has been observed in the elastic moduli of Au). Therefore, the thermodynamic theory of point defects was used to include the additional volume of the vacancies at high temperatures (‘real crystal’), resulting in the following fitted parameters: Q = (V (0) K (0))/γ = 4.04 (1) × 10(−18) J, V (0) = 67.1671 (3) Å(3), b = (K (0)′ − 1)/2 = 3.84 (9), θ(D) = 182 (2) K, (v (f)/Ω)exp(s (f)/k (B)) = 1.8 (23) and h (f) = 0.9 (2) eV, where V (0) is the unit-cell volume at 0 K, K (0) and K (0)′ are the isothermal incompressibility and its first derivative with respect to pressure (evaluated at zero pressure), γ is a Grüneisen parameter, θ (D) is the Debye temperature, v (f), h (f) and s (f) are the vacancy formation volume, enthalpy and entropy, respectively, Ω is the average volume per atom, and k (B) is Boltzmann’s constant. International Union of Crystallography 2018-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5884389/ /pubmed/29657568 http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600576718002248 Text en © Martha G. Pamato et al. 2018 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are cited.http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/
spellingShingle Research Papers
Pamato, Martha G.
Wood, Ian G.
Dobson, David P.
Hunt, Simon A.
Vočadlo, Lidunka
The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title_full The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title_fullStr The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title_full_unstemmed The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title_short The thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
title_sort thermal expansion of gold: point defect concentrations and pre-melting in a face-centred cubic metal
topic Research Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5884389/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29657568
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600576718002248
work_keys_str_mv AT pamatomarthag thethermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT woodiang thethermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT dobsondavidp thethermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT huntsimona thethermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT vocadlolidunka thethermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT pamatomarthag thermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT woodiang thermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT dobsondavidp thermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT huntsimona thermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal
AT vocadlolidunka thermalexpansionofgoldpointdefectconcentrationsandpremeltinginafacecentredcubicmetal