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Original Articles

Low-energy sputtering events at free surfaces near anti-phase and grain boundaries in Ni3Al

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Pages 4243-4258 | Received 22 Mar 2005, Accepted 19 Sep 2005, Published online: 11 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

Atomic recoil events on free surfaces orthogonal to two different anti-phase boundaries (APBs) and two grain boundaries (GBs) in Ni3Al are simulated using molecular dynamics methods. The threshold energy for sputtering, E sp, and adatom creation, E ad, are determined as a function of recoil direction. The study is relevant to FEG STEM (a scanning transmission electron microscope fitted with a field emission gun) experiments on preferential Al sputtering and/or enhancement of the Ni–Al ratio near boundaries. Surfaces intersected by {110} and {111} APBs have minimum E sp of 6.5 eV for an Al atom on the Ni–Al mixed (M) surface, which is close to the value of 6.0 eV for a perfect M surface. High values of E sp of an Al atom generally occur at a large angle to the surface normal and depend strongly on the detailed atomic configuration of the surface. The mean E sp, averaged over all recoil directions, reveals that APBs have a small effect on the threshold sputtering. However, the results for E ad imply that an electron beam could create more Al adatoms on surfaces intersected by APBs than on those without. The equilibrium, minimum energy structures for a (001) surface intersected by either Σ5[001](210) or Σ25[001](340) symmetric tilt grain boundaries are computed. E sp for surface Al atoms near these GBs increases monotonically with increasing recoil angle to the surface normal, with a minimum value, which is only about 1 eV different from that obtained for a perfect surface. Temperature up to 300 K has no effect on this result. It is concluded that the experimental observations of preferential sputtering are due to effects beyond those for E sp studied here. Possible reasons for this are discussed.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Professor I. P. Jones and B. B. Tang of the University of Birmingham for valuable discussions during the course of collaborative research, and the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council for provision of financial support, and the US Department of Energy, Office of Fusion Energy Science under contact DE-AC06-76RLO1830.

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