| Literature DB >> 31988514 |
Kazuto Arakawa1, Mihai-Cosmin Marinica2, Steven Fitzgerald3, Laurent Proville2, Duc Nguyen-Manh4, Sergei L Dudarev4, Pui-Wai Ma4, Thomas D Swinburne5, Alexandra M Goryaeva2, Tetsuya Yamada6, Takafumi Amino7, Shigeo Arai8, Yuta Yamamoto8, Kimitaka Higuchi8, Nobuo Tanaka8, Hidehiro Yasuda9, Tetsuya Yasuda9, Hirotaro Mori9.
Abstract
The diffusion of defects in crystalline materials1 controls macroscopic behaviour of a wide range of processes, including alloying, precipitation, phase transformation and creep2. In real materials, intrinsic defects are unavoidably bound to static trapping centres such as impurity atoms, meaning that their diffusion is dominated by de-trapping processes. It is generally believed that de-trapping occurs only by thermal activation. Here, we report the direct observation of the quantum de-trapping of defects below around one-third of the Debye temperature. We successfully monitored the de-trapping and migration of self-interstitial atom clusters, strongly trapped by impurity atoms in tungsten, by triggering de-trapping out of equilibrium at cryogenic temperatures, using high-energy electron irradiation and in situ transmission electron microscopy. The quantum-assisted de-trapping leads to low-temperature diffusion rates orders of magnitude higher than a naive classical estimate suggests. Our analysis shows that this phenomenon is generic to any crystalline material.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31988514 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-019-0584-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841