Joint PITT-CMU Physics and Astronomy Colloquium: Malcolm Stocks (ORNL)

November 23, 2015 - 9:30pm to 11:00pm

Title: Tuning Materials Properties Through Extreme Chemical Complexity 
Abstract:
  The development of metallic alloys is arguably one of the oldest of sciences, dating back at least 3,000 years. It is therefore very surprising when a new class of metallic alloys is discovered. High Entropy Alloys (HEA) appear to be such a class; furthermore, one that is receiving a great deal of attention in terms of the underlying physics responsible for their formation as well as unusual combinations of mechanical and physical properties that make them candidates for technological applications. The term HEA typically refers to alloys that are comprised of 5, 6, 7… elements, each in in equal proportion, that condense onto simple underlying crystalline lattices but where the different atomic species are distributed randomly on the different sites - face centered cubic (fcc) Cr0.2Mn0.2Fe0.2Co0.2Ni0.2 and body-centered-cubic (bcc) V0.2Nb0.2Mo0.2Ta0.2W0.2 being textbook examples. The naming of these alloys originates from an early conjecture that these unusual systems are stabilized as disordered solid solutions alloys by the high entropy of mixing associated with the large number of components  - a conjecture that has since proved insufficient. In the first part of the presentation I will provide a general introduction to these materials and how they differ from conventional alloys that underpin much of our energy generation and transportation technologies. In addition I will describe a model that allows us to predict which combinations of N elements taken from the periodic table are most likely to yield a HEA that is based on the results of modern high-throughput ab initio electronic structure computations. In the second part I will broaden the discussion to a wider class of equiatomic fcc concentrated solid solution alloys that is based on the 3d- and 4d-transition metal elements Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Pd that range from simple binary alloys, such as Ni0.5Co0.5 and Ni0.5Fe0.5, to the quinary high entropy alloys Cr0.2Mn0.2Fe0.2Co0.2Ni0.2 an Cr0.2Pd0.2Fe0.2Co0.2Ni0.2 themselves. Here I will discuss the role that increasing chemical complexity and disorder has on the underlying electronic structure and the magnetic and transport properties. Finally, I will argue that the manipulation of chemical complexity may offer a new design principle for more radiation tolerant structural materials for energy applications.
 
This work is supported by the Materials Sciences and Engineering Division of the Office of Basic Energy Sciences (BES) US-DOE and by the Center for Energy Dissipation and Defect Evolution (EDDE), which is a DOE-BES Energy Frontier Research Center (EFRC). 
 

Host: Michael Widom

Location and Address

Wean Hall 8325, CMU

Schedule of Events

*Dr. G. Malcolm Stocks is a Corporate Fellow and a Group Leader of the Materials Theory Group. His major research activities are in development and application of first principles electronic structure methods (particularly those based on multiple scattering Green's function methods), the theory of magnetism, alloy theory, semiconductor-oxide interfaces, and the application of parallel algorithms and computers to extend the size and complexity of systems amenable to treatment by first principles methods. His current research is focused on the theory of equilibrium and non-equilibrium properties of inhomogeneous itinerant magnets, magnetic nano-structures, the development of massively parallel methods for performing large scale first principles (LDA) calculations [in particular the order-N Locally Selfconsistent Multiple Scattering (LSMS) method] and their application to problems in magnetism, disordered alloys, and bulk amorphous metals. Other interests include the first principles theory of the electronic structure and energetics of substitutionally disordered systems [in particular the Korringa-Kohn-Rostoker Coherent-Potential Approximation (KKR_CPA) method], ordering mechanisms in alloys, and alloy phase stability.