Next Article in Journal
Nanoscale MOF–Protein Composites for Theranostics
Next Article in Special Issue
Effect of Pore Defects on Very High Cycle Fatigue Behavior of TC21 Titanium Alloy Additively Manufactured by Electron Beam Melting
Previous Article in Journal
Hydrogen-like Impurity States in β-Ga2O3/(AlxGa1−x)2O3 Core/Shell Nanostructures: Comparison between Nanorods and Nanotubes
Previous Article in Special Issue
Effect of Cooling Rate on Crystallization Behavior during Solidification of Hyper Duplex Stainless Steel S33207: An In Situ Confocal Microscopy Study
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Nucleation of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) Nanophases in Aluminum Alloys: A First-Principles ThermodynamicsStudy

1
School of Materials Science and Hydrogen Energy, Foshan University, Foshan 528000, China
2
School of Mechatronic Engineering and Automation, Foshan University, Foshan 528000, China
3
Research Institute of Automobile Parts Technology, Hunan Institute of Technology, Hengyang 421002, China
4
Shenzhen Rspower Technology Co., Ltd., Shenzhen 518000, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Crystals 2023, 13(8), 1228; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst13081228
Submission received: 14 July 2023 / Revised: 2 August 2023 / Accepted: 7 August 2023 / Published: 9 August 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Crystallization of High Performance Metallic Materials)

Abstract

:
High-performance Sc-containing aluminum alloys are limited in their industrial application due to the high cost of Sc elements. Er, Zr, and Y elements are candidates for replacing Sc elements. Combined with the first-principles thermodynamic calculation and the classical nucleation theory, the nucleation of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) nanophases in dilutealuminum alloys were investigated to reveal their structural stability. The calculated results showed that the critical radius and nucleation energy of the L12-Al3M phases were as follows: Al3Er > Al3Y > Al3Sc > Al3Zr. The Al3Zr phase was the easiest to nucleate in thermodynamics, while the nucleation of the Al3Y and Al3Er phases were relatively difficult in thermodynamics. Various structures of Al3(Y, Zr) phases with the radius r < 1 nm can coexist in Al-Y-Zr alloys. At a precipitate’s radius of 1–10 nanometers, the core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase illustrated the highest nucleation energy, while the separated structure Al3Zr/Al3Y obtained the lowest one, and had thermodynamic advantages in the nucleation process. Moreover, the core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase obtained a higher nucleation energy than Al3Zr(Sc) and Al3Zr(Er). Core–doubleshelled Al3Zr/Er(Y) obtained a lower nucleation energy than that of Al3Zr(Y) due to the negative ΔGchem of Al3Er and the negative Al3Er/Al3Y interfacial energy, and was preferentially precipitated in thermodynamics stability.

1. Introduction

Sc-containing aluminum alloys are ideal materials for key components in the aerospace, high-speed rail, and automobile industries due to their high strength, corrosion resistance, and formability [1,2,3]. L12-Al3Sc nanoparticles precipitated in Sc-containing aluminum alloys can effectively inhibit the recrystallization process [4], thereby obtaining comprehensive properties such as high strength, toughness, and corrosion resistance. Moreover, Seidman et al. [5,6] developed a series of Al-Sc high-temperature aluminum alloys. However, due to the high diffusion rate of Sc atoms, L12-Al3Sc nanoparticles are prone to coarsening, reducing their ability to inhibit recrystallization and high-temperature performance. On the other hand, Zr atoms can partially replace Sc atoms in the Al3Sc nanophase, forming a core–shelled Al3(Sc1−x, Zrx), namely an Al3Sc core and Al3Zr shell) [7], where the Al3Zr shell improves the coarsening resistance of the Al3(Sc1−x, Zrx) nanophase due to the low diffusion rate of Zr atoms in the aluminum matrix [8].
However, the high cost of Sc elements greatly limits the engineering application of Sc-containing aluminum alloys. As members of the Sc element family, Er, Yb rare earth elements and the Y element have been considered ideal substitutes for Sc elements. Er and Yb elements were reported to form a core–shell structure of Al3(Er, Zr) [9,10] and Al3(Yb, Zr) [11,12] nanophases, which also effectively inhibited the recrystallization of aluminum alloys. Based on high-throughput first-principles calculations of the nucleation and growth for the L12structure Al3RE phases, Fan et al. [13,14] revealed the ΔGV firstly decreased from Sc, Y to Ce, then increased linearly for RE elements, and the ΔGV tended to increase linearly with the temperature. It was speculated that the Y element could replace the expensive Sc element.The investigation by Zhang et al. [15,16] showed that the precipitation phase was mainly the Al3Y phase, which became the core of Al3Zr and promoted the precipitation kinetics of solid solution Zr atoms, whereas a hybrid structure of Al3(Zr, Y) rather than the typical core–shelled structure was observed after long-term homogenization, where the Y and Zr elements were uniformly distributed in Al3(Y, Zr) nanoprecipitates through atom probe tomography (APT).
Some research has been conducted on the formation mechanism of the hybrid structure of Al3(Zr, Y). Zhang et al. [16] indicated that the hybrid structure of Al3(Zr, Y) was attributed to the strong interactions between the Y and Zr atoms, resulting in their co-precipitation. Based on first-principles calculations, Wang et al. [17] indicated that the doping of the Y element and the Zr element decreased the interface energies of the FCC-Al(001)/FCC-Al3Y(001) interface and formed a hybrid structure of Al3(Y, Zr) instead of an Al3Y core + Al3Zr shell structure. The author’s previous research indicated that the interface energy of Al3Zr/Al was lower than that of Al3Zr/Al3Y, and it was deduced that Al3Zr tended to form a shell layer, while Al3Y formed a core layer. However, the high coherent strain energy made the Al3Y/Al3Zr interface unstable, and it was difficult to form a stable cored Al3Y/shelled Al3Zr structure [18]. Although the author’s previous investigation elucidated the reason for Al3Y/Al3Zr not having a core–shelled structure based on the coherent strain energy, there were several issues that needed to be answered, such as whether the hybrid structure of Al3(Zr, Y) was determined by atomic diffusion control or thermodynamic structure stability.
One view was that the formation of the core–shelled Al3M phase was attributed to the differences in atomic diffusion rates. Al3Sc and Al3Er core structures were formed due to the fast diffusion rate of the Sc and Er atoms. The diffusion rate of the Zr element was slow, resulting in the formation of an Al3Zr shell structure [19]. Furthermore, the core(Al3Er)–double shell (Al3Sc/Al3Zr) structure of L12-Al3(Sc, Er, Zr) was precipitated in Al-Sc-Er-Zr alloys after homogenization at 400 °C [20]. Seidman et al. [20] suggested that the core–double-shelled L12-Al3(Sc, Er, Zr) can be attributed to their difference in diffusion rate, e.g., DEr > DSc > DZr. Leibner et al. [21] found that there were two major groups of core–double-shelled L12-Al3(Sc, Er, Zr) observed after aging at 600 °C/4 h, one having the usual core (Al3Er)–double shell (Al3Sc/Al3Zr) structure and the other having an unusual core (Al3Sc)–double shell (Al3Er/Al3Zr) structure. They suggested that the segregation of the Sc atom to dislocations and the interaction between the solid solution atoms and the Sc atom promoted the formation of the unusual core (Al3Sc)–double shell structure. It should be noted that the hybrid structure of Al3(Zr, Sc) [22] and Al3(Er, Zr) [23] was also observed in aluminum alloys. Therefore, the difference in diffusion rates between atoms does not explain the formation of core–shelled structures well.
The thermodynamic analysis of nanophases’ nucleation based on first-principles calculations can provide insights into the phase transformation process of L12-Al3M phases. Jiang et al. [24,25] used first-principles calculation methods to calculate the nucleation energies of the Al3(Er, Zr) and Al3(Sc, Zr) phases with different microstructures, revealing the thermodynamic stability of the Al3(Er, Zr) and Al3(Sc, Zr) phases during the homogenization precipitation. The nucleation properties calculated by Liu [26] showed that the core–shelled Al3(Er1−x, Scx) obtained a highly stable structure due to its low nucleation energy, which was independent of the temperature and Sc/Er ratio. However, first-principles calculations of the nucleation and thermodynamic stability for the Al3(Y, Zr) phase were rarely reported. Furthermore, the author’s investigation showed that Er atoms tended to segregate at the Al3Y/Al3Zr interface, and were inclined to form a core–double-shelled Al3(Y, Er, Zr) structure with an Al3Y core, an Al3Er inner shell, and an Al3Zr outer shell [18]. The nucleation and thermodynamic stability of core–double-shelled Al3(Y, Er, Zr) needed to be evaluated to develop Al-Y-Zr series alloys.
Combining with the calculation results of interface energies and the coherent strain energy in the previous research [18], the total nucleation energies of various structures of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Zr, Y)phases were calculated based on first-principles thermodynamic calculation and classical nucleation theory. The critical nucleation energies and nucleation radii of Al3M phases were calculated to compare the nucleation differences of Al3M nanophases. The nucleation energies of various structures of ternary L12-Al3(Y, Zr) phases were investigated to reveal the formation mechanism of Al3(Y, Zr) with a hybrid structure. The nucleation calculation result of core–shelled Al3(Y, Zr) was also compared with that of core–shelled Al3(Sc, Zr) and core–shelled Al3(Er, Zr). Furthermore, based on first-principles calculations, the nucleation energy of the core–double-shelled Al3(Er, Y, Zr) phase was investigated to evaluate its thermodynamic stability. This paper aimed to reveal the internal formation mechanism of L12-Al3M with a core–shelled structure from the perspective of first-principles thermodynamic calculations, and provided guidance for the development of new Al-Y-Zr series alloys

2. Computational Methods

Based on density functional theory (DFT) [27], first-principles calculations were carried out by VASP software [28]. The electron configuration was described by Al-3s23p1, Sc-3s23p64s13d2, Zr-4s24p65s14d3, Er-6s25p65d1, and Y-4s24p65s14d2 valence states, respectively. The ion–electron interactions were described by the projection augmented wave (PAW) method withinthe frozen core approximation [29]. The exchange-correlation energy functional between electrons was described by the Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE) [30,31] method of generalized gradient approximation (GGA). The kinetic energy cutoff of the plane wave basis and the size of the k-mesh for the Brillouin zone were tested for self-consistent convergence. The calculation of the bulk phase of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) used conventional single cells. In each periodic direction of reciprocal space, the geometric structure was optimized by the Monkhorst–Pack k-point grids with linear k-mesh analytical values of less than 0.032π/Å. Using the linear tetrahedron method with the Blöchl correction, the total energy was calculated when the total energy converged to 10−4 eV/atom. The lattice constants (a) and bulk modulus (B) were predicted as fcc-Al (a = 4.042 Å and B = 78.2 GPa), L12-Al3Sc (a = 4.103 Å and B = 86.4 GPa), L12-Al3Zr (a = 4.108 Å and B = 102.3 GPa), and L12-Al3Er (a = 4.232 Å and B = 78.5 GPa), respectively, which agreed well with Ref. [26].
Vibration entropy had a significant influence on the chemical formation energy ΔGchem corresponding to the precipitation of the L12-Al3M phase from the fcc-AlnM solutionmatrix. The calculation of vibration entropy was based on the method of the density functional perturbation theory (DFPT) [32] under the simple harmonic approximation, and the phonon spectrum of Al3M was calculated by using the 2 × 2 × 2 supercell model. The AlnM was adopted by the 2 × 2 × 2 supercell Al matrix, and the M atom was doped and dissolved in the center. In this method, a small external disturbance was introduced, and the linear response of the system was calculated based on this disturbance. By calculating the response function, the perturbation expression of the vibration frequency can be derived, resulting in the vibration entropy difference of the Al3M phase.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Nucleation of Binary L12-Al3M Phases

According to the classical nucleation theory, the nucleation work consisted of two parts: the energy released by the precipitated phase from the Al matrix, and the energy from the new interface between the precipitated phase and the matrix. The precipitated phase was usually assumed to be a sphere with uniform density distribution. When the L12-Al3M nanophases are precipitated from the Al matrix, their precipitation radius R and nucleation work ΔG can be expressed as:
Δ G = 4 π 3 R 3 · Δ G V + 4 π R 2 · γ
where γ is the interface energy per unit area after subtracting the coherent strain energy. The Al(001)/Al3M(001)-contacting facet was the most energy-favored orientation [18,24,25], and the interface energy of Al(001)/Al3M(001) was calculated to estimate the critical nucleation works and nucleation radius. ΔGV is the volume-free energy per unit volume, which is defined as:
ΔGV = ΔGchem + Gs
where ΔGchem is the chemical formation energy corresponding to the precipitation of the L12-Al3M phase in the matrix; Gs is the coherent strain energy.
The chemical reaction equation of the Al3M nanophase precipitation can be written as: AlnM = Al3M + (n − 3)Al; so its chemical energy is expressed as [33]:
Δ G chem = G A l 3 M + ( n 3 ) μ Al G A l n M = ( Δ H A l 3 M Δ H A l n M ) T ( Δ S A l 3 M Δ S A l n M )
Here Δ H Al 3 M and Δ H Al n M are the formation enthalpies of L12-Al3M and fcc-AlnM, respectively, and the enthalpy can be approximately equal to the internal energy here because the volume–pressure term in the solid state can be ignored [33]; Δ S Al 3 M and Δ S Al n M are the formation entropy of L12-Al3M and fcc-AlnM, respectively.As the nucleation process of the Al3M nanophases was sensitive to the temperature, the contribution of formation entropy should not be ignored. The contribution of formation entropy may become very important at high temperature. The entropy change in the alloy consisted of three parts: configuration entropy, hot electron entropy, and vibration entropy. In this calculation, the configuration entropy was generally negligible for a dilute alloy, which was clearly revealed for dilute Al-Sc-Zr alloys [24] and Al-Er-Zr alloys [25], and the hot electron entropy can be ignored for relatively low temperatures [34], so the vibration entropy was considered as contributing to entropy change.
According to the differentiation of Equation (1), the critical nucleation radius of R* and the critical nucleation work ΔGV (R*) can be obtained as:
R * = 2 γ Δ G V
Δ G V ( R * ) = 16 π 3 γ 3 Δ G V 2
The corresponding differences in enthalpy and vibration entropy between the L12-Al3M phases and the fcc-AlnM solution matrix are shown in Table 1. The corresponding differences in enthalpy ( Δ H f A l 3 M Δ H f A l n M ) were −0.718 eV/atom, −0.667 eV/atom, −0.823 eV/atom, and −0.902 eV/atom for the Al3Sc phase, Al3Zr phase, Al3Er phase, and Al3Y phase, respectively. The enthalpy difference of Al3Sc was in good agreement with the calculated values of −0.72 eV/atom in the literature [33], and was higher than the calculated values of −0.776 eV/atom in the literature [24]. The corresponding enthalpy differences of the Al3Zr and Al3Er phases were −0.667 eV/atom and 0.867 ev/atom, respectively, which were also slightly higher than that of the investigation [24,25]. The enthalpy difference of the Al3Y phase has not yet been documented, but the calculation result was −0.902 eV/atom.
In order to calculate the nucleation work of the Al3M phase in the Al matrix, it was necessary to calculate the vibration entropy difference. The vibration entropy differences of the Al3Sc phase, Al3Zr phase, and Al3Er phase were 3.35 kB/atom, 4.01 kB/atom, and 5.18 kB/atom, respectively, which were higher than the calculated results in the literature (2.67 kB/Sc [24], 2.72 kB/Zr [24], and3.53 kB/Er [25]). The vibration entropy difference of the Al3Y phase was 5.72 kB/atom.
The author’s previous research calculated the coherent strain energy of L12-Al3M/Al [18], where the coherent strain energies were 0.0035 ev/atom for Al3Sc/Al, 0.0023 eV/atom for Al3Zr/Al, 0.0088 eV/atom for Al3Er/Al, and 0.0094 eV/atom for Al3Y/Al. Based on Equations (1)–(3), the computation result at 673 K illustrated that the interface strains contributed to only ~8.5% of the volumetric formation energy for the Al3Sc phase, the Al3Zr phase, the Al3Er phase, and the Al3Y phase in Al. It indicated that the coherent strain energy of Al3M/Al had little influence on the precipitation of Al3M nanophases.
Combining with the Al/Al3M interface energy [18], the critical nucleation radius and critical nucleation work of each phase at 673 K are shown in Table 2. For L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Zr, Er, Y), the predicted critical nucleation radii were 5.95 Å, 3.89 Å, 9.57 Å, and 9.40 Å, for the Al3Sc phase, the Al3Zr phase, the Al3Er phase, and the Al3Y phase, respectively. The critical nucleation works were 2.01 × 10−19 J, 4.83 × 10−20 J, 6.94 × 10−19 J, and 6.84 × 10−19 J for the Al3Sc phase, the Al3Zr phase, the Al3Er phase, and the Al3Y phase, respectively. Among them, the calculated value of the critical nucleation radius of the Al3Sc phase was slightly lower than the literature value [24], but the critical nucleation radii of the Al3Zr phase and the Al3Er phase were slightly higher than the value in Jiang’s investigation [24,25]. On the other hand, the critical nucleation work of Al3Sc was slightly less than the literature value [24], and the critical nucleation works of Al3Zr and Al3Er were slightly greater than the literature value [25]. The critical nucleation radius and critical nucleation work of the Al3Y phase at 673 K has not been reported yet. The investigation of Fan et al. [14] showed that the critical nucleation radius of Al3Y for the (100) plane was about 3 Å at 300K, which was lower than the calculation value in this research. The reason can be attributed to the different calculation methods of nucleation energy and the low temperature.
Among the various L12-Al3M phases, the Al3Zr phase obtained the smallest critical nucleation radius and lowest critical nucleation work, whereas the Al3Er and Al3Y phases obtained similar nucleation characteristics, and displayed the largest critical nucleation radius and highest critical nucleation work. The critical nucleation radius and nucleation work of Al3Sc were lower than those of the Al3Er and Al3Y phases, which agreed well with Fan’s calculation [14]. It indicated that Al3Zr had thermodynamic advantages in the nucleation process, while the Al3Er and Al3Y phases were relatively difficult to nucleate but had advantages in precipitation kinetics.

3.2. Nucleation and Stability of Multicomponent L12-Al3M Phases

As described in Section 3.1, the thermodynamic priority order of precipitation was: Al3Zr > Al3Sc > Al3Er > Al3Y. The lowest interface energy of Al3Zr/Al suggested that the Al3Zr phase always tended to wrap outside the precipitation phase during the precipitation process. Due to the low interfacial energy of L12-Al3Zr/Al3Sc and L12-Al3Zr/Al3Er, once a core–shell structure was formed, the core–shelled Al3Sc (Zr) and Al3Er (Zr) were stable structures. However, the previous research showed that Al3(Y, Zr) transformed from a core–shelled structure into a hybrid structure during homogenization at high temperatures [15,16]. In this section, the nucleation of multicomponent L12-Al3(N, Zr) (N = Y, Sc, Er) phases were investigated based on first-principles thermodynamic calculations. The nucleation of possible ternary L12-Al3(Y, Zr) phases included the core–shelled structures (the Al3Y-core + Al3Zr-shell structure, denoted as L12-Al3Zr(Y)), the hybrid structure (denoted as L12-Al3(Zrx, Y1−x), and the separate nucleation of binary L12-Al3Zr and L12-Al3Y (denoted as L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y). Moreover, the nucleation calculation result of core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) was also compared with that of core–shelled Al3Zr(Sc,) and core–shelled Al3Zr(Er).
Based on the classical nucleation theory, the structure stability of L12 nanoparticles with the different structures can be evaluated through the total nucleation energy ΔGAl3(N,Zr) (N = Y, Sc, Er), and the expressions are given as [24]:
Δ G A l 3 Z r ( N ) = 4 π 3 [ ( R 3 r 3 ) · Δ G V A l 3 Z r + r 3 · Δ G V A l 3 N ] + 4 π ( r 2 · γ A l 3 Z r / A l 3 N + R 2 · γ A l 3 Z r / A l )
Δ G A l 3 N + A l 3 Z r = 4 π 3 ( r 3 × Δ G V A l 3 N + r 3 × Δ G V A l 3 Z r ) + 4 π ( r 2 × γ A l / A l 3 N + r 2 × γ A l / A l 3 Z r )
Δ G A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) = 4 π 3 R 3 · Δ G V A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) + 4 π R 2 · γ A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x )
Here R is the radius of ternary L12-Al3(N, Zr), and r is the radius of the binary Al3N. Assuming that all the solute atoms had completely precipitated from the Al matrix, the R and r values of ternary L12-Al3(N, Zr) with a core–shelled structure depended on the relative precipitation amount of solute atoms N and Zr. Δ G V A l 3 N and Δ G V A l 3 Z r are the volumetric formation energy of the L12-Al3N phase and the Al3Zr phase in aluminum alloys. γ A l 3 Z r / A l 3 N and γ A l 3 Z r / A l are the interface energies of the Al3Zr/Al3N and Al3Zr/Al interface in aluminum alloys. The Al3Zr(001)/Al3N(001)-contacting facets were considered to be the most energy-favored orientation, and the interfaces’ energies were calculated in the authors’ previous investigation [18]. It should be noted that the interfaces’ energies were generally oerestimated at the actual precipitation temperature due to the density functional principles of the ground state. Δ G V A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) and γ A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) are the volumetric formation energy and the interface energy of the hybrid structure of Al3(Nx, Zr1−x). However, it was difficult to directly calculate the value of Δ G V A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) , which was estimated by the composition-weighted summation of Δ G V A l 3 N and Δ G V A l 3 Z r [24]. Similarly, γ A l 3 ( N x ,   Z r 1 x ) was evaluated by the composition-weighted summation of γ A l 3 N / A l and γ A l 3 Z r / A l .
Furthermore, the authors’ previous investigation indicated that Er atoms tended to segregate at the Al3Y/Al3Zr interface, and were inclined to form a core–double-shelled Al3Y/Al3Er/Al3Zr structure [18], denoted as Al3Zr/Er(Y), and its nucleation energy and thermodynamic stability can be evaluated as:
Δ G A l 3 Z r / E r ( Y ) = 4 π 3 [ ( R 2 3 R 1 3 ) × Δ G V A l 3 Z r + ( R 1 3 r 3 ) × Δ G V A l 3 E r + r 3 × Δ G V A l 3 Y ) + 4 π ( r 2 × γ A l 3 Y / A l 3 E r + R 1 2 × γ A l 3 Z r / A l 3 E r + R 2 2 × γ A l 3 Z r / A l )
Here R1 and R2 are the radii of the first and second shells of the core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Er (Y), respectively; r is the radius of the Al3Y core layer.
Under the conditions of homogenization temperature (T = 673 K) and the equal solute atomic ratio (the atomic ratio of Y to Zr was 1), the total nucleation energies (ΔG) of the various possible structures for the L12-Al3(Y, Zr) phase were calculated as a function of the precipitate radius (R), and the results are plotted in Figure 1. It showed that the nucleation energy of various structures of Al3(Y, Zr) increased with the radius of the precipitated phase. At a radius of 0–1 nanometers, there was no significant difference in the free energy of each phase; thus, several structures of Al3(Y, Zr) phases can coexist in the early stage of homogenization. To some extent, the 0–1 nanometer precipitation stage corresponded to the early aging stage of atomic clusters, and did not form a stable microstructure.
At a radius of 1–10 nanometers, the difference in the total nucleation energy among different structures became increasingly significant. The core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase illustrated the highest nucleation work among various precipitate structures, indicating that the core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase precipitated without advantage in thermodynamics. However, the separated nucleation of binary L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y obtained the lowest nucleation energy, suggesting that L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y had thermodynamic advantages in the nucleation process. Due to the low segregation energy of Zr elements at the Al3Y interface, it was beneficial to drive the segregation of Zr elements at the Al3Y interface [18]. Gao et al. [16] studied the early precipitation phase structure of Al-0.08Y-0.30Zr alloy at 350 °C for 10 min, and the results showed that the precipitation phase was mainly the Al3Y phase, which became the core of Al3Zr and promoted the precipitation kinetics of solid solution Zr atoms. However, it was difficult to form a stable core–shelled Al3Y/Al3Zr owing to the large coherency strain energy and high mismatch between Al3Y and Al3Zr [18]. Thus, the separated structure of L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y was considered to be the thermodynamically stable structure. The investigation by Gao et al. [16] showed that after isothermal aging at 400 °C for 200 h, the Y and Zr atoms in the Al-Y-Zr alloy were almost uniformly distributed within the precipitate phase, indicating a separated structure of L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y, and did not exhibit a clear core–shelled structure, which confirmed the first-principles calculation results in this paper.
Figure 2 shows the total nucleation energies (ΔG) for three kinds of core–shelled structures, Al3Zr(Sc), Al3Zr(Er), and Al3Zr(Y), under the condition of homogenization at 673 K and the complete precipitation of Sc, Y, Er, and Zr in equal proportion, respectively. The nucleation energies of core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) and Al3Zr(Sc) increased with the radius of the precipitated phase, whereas the nucleation energies of Al3Zr(Er) were negative, and decreased with the radius of the precipitated phase. The calculations of Al3Zr(Sc) and Al3Zr(Er) were similar to the investigation by Jiang et al. [24,25]. The order of the nucleation energies was: Al3Zr(Y) > Al3Zr(Sc) > Al3Zr(Er). The core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase obtained the highest nucleation energy, indicating that it was inclined to form a separated structure, L12-Al3Zr/Al3Y, which was very consistent with the experimental observation [16]. The core–shelled Al3Zr(Sc) and Al3Zr(Er) were thermodynamically stable structures owing to their low nucleation energies, which were confirmed by the experimental observation in Al-Sc-Zr alloys [8] and Al-Er-Zr alloys [9]. In comparison with Al3Zr(Y) and Al3Zr(Sc), although the Al3Er/Al3Zr interface had a higher coherent strain energy than that the of Al3Sc/Al3Zr interface [18], core-shelled Al3Zr(Er) obtained a low nucleation energy due to its low chemical energy ΔGchem and the Al3Er/Al3Zr interface energy. Thus, the nucleation energy of Al3M nanophases depended on their chemical energy ΔGchem and the interface energy.
The nucleation energies (ΔG) of core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Er(Y) were carried out under the condition of homogenization at 673 K and the complete precipitation of Y, Er, and Zr in equal proportion. The nucleation energy of Al3Zr/Er(Y) was negative and significantly decreased with the precipitation radius, as shown in Figure 2. The nucleation energy of Al3Zr/Er(Y) was far lower than that of core–shelled Al3Zr(Y), and obtained high thermodynamic stability, preferentially precipitating in thermodynamics. Core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Er(Y) was inclined to form in Al-Y-Er--Zr alloys, as the Er atom tended to segregate at the Al3Y/Al3Zr interface [18]. The segregation of the Er atom dramatically decreased the nucleation energy due to the decrease in ΔGchem and strain energy GS, as illustrated in Al3Zr(Er), although the high interfacial energy of Al3Y/Al3Er replaced the relatively low interface energy of Al3Y/Al3Zr. Interestingly, the nucleation energy of Al3Zr/Er(Y) was even lower than that of Al3Zr(Er) due to the addition of the Y atom, which can be attributed to the negative interface energy of Al3Er/Al3Y and low coherent strain energy Gs. Similarly, in the Al-Sc-Zr aluminum alloy, the addition of the Er atom formed a core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Sc (Er) instead of forming separated Al3(Sc, Zr) and Al3(Er, Zr) [20], which was attributed to the decreased nucleation energy of Al3(Sc, Zr) nanoparticles by its low chemical energy ΔGchem. Therefore, the design of the core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Er(Y) nanophase can provide guidance for the development of new Al-Er-Y-Zr alloys.

4. Conclusions

Based on the first-principles thermodynamic calculation, the nucleation energies of the L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Zr, Er, Y) nanophases in aluminum alloys were studied combined with classical nucleation theory. The conclusions were as follows:
(1)
The critical radius and nucleation work of the L12-Al3M precipitate phase were as follows: Al3Er > Al3Y > Al3Sc > Al3Zr. The Al3Zr phase was the easiest to nucleate in thermodynamics, while the nucleation of the Al3Y and Al3Er phases were relatively difficult in thermodynamics.
(2)
Various structures of Al3(Y, Zr) phases with the radius r < 1 nm can coexist in Al-Y-Zr alloys. At a precipitate’s radius of 1–10 nanometers, the core–shelled Al3Zr(Y) phase illustrated the highest nucleation energy, while the separated structure, Al3Zr/Al3Y, obtained the lowest one, and had thermodynamic advantages in the nucleation process.
(3)
Core–double-shelled Al3Zr/Er(Y) obtained a lower nucleation energy than that of Al3Zr(Y) due to the negative ΔGchem of Al3Er and the negative Al3Er/Al3Y interface energy, and preferentially precipitated in thermodynamics stability.

Author Contributions

B.N. and Y.S. conceived and designed the research; S.L., F.L. and Z.Y. performed the first-principles calculation; T.F. and D.C. analyzed the experimental data; S.L. wrote the manuscript. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by the R & D plan for key areas in Guangdong Province (2020B01 0186001), the Science and Technology Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology (G2022030060L), the Science and technology project in Guangdong (2020b15120093, 2020B121202002), the Science and technology research project of Foshan (1920001000412, 2220001005305), and the R and D plan for key areas in Jiangxi Province (20201BBE51009, 20212BBE51012).

Data Availability Statement

The data presented in this study are available on request from the corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Liu, L.; Xu, G.; Deng, Y.; Yu, Q.; Li, G.; Zhang, L.; Liu, B.; Fu, L.; Pan, Q. Existing form of Sc in metal-inert gas welded Al-0.60 Mg-0.75 Si alloy and its role in welding strength. Mater. Charact. 2023, 197, 112649. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Ye, J.; Pan, Q.; Liu, B.; Hu, Q.; Qu, L.; Wang, W.; Wang, X. Effects of co-addition of minor Sc and Zr on aging precipitates and mechanical properties of Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloys. J. Mater. Res. Technol. 2023, 22, 2944–2954. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Deng, P.; Mo, W.; Ouyang, Z.; Tang, C.; Luo, B.; Bai, Z. Mechanical properties and corrosion behaviors of (Sc, Zr) modified Al-Cu-Mg alloy. Mater. Charact. 2022, 196, 112619. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. Zha, M.; Tian, T.; Jia, H.L.; Zhang, H.M.; Wang, H.Y. Sc/Zr ratio-dependent mechanisms of strength evolution and microstructural thermal stability of multi-scale hetero-structured Al–Mg–Sc–Zr alloys. J. Mater.Sci. Technol. 2023, 140, 67–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. De Luca, A.; Seidman, D.N.; Dunand, D.C. Effects of Mo and Mn microadditions on strengthening and over-homogenization resistance of nanoprecipitation-strengthened Al-Zr-Sc-Er-Si alloys. Acta Mater. 2019, 165, 1–14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Booth-Morrison, C.; Mao, Z.; Diaz, M.; Dunand, D.C.; Wolverton, C.; Seidman, D.N. Role of silicon in accelerating the nucleation of Al3(Sc, Zr) precipitates in dilute Al-Sc-Zr alloys. Acta Mater. 2012, 60, 4740–4752. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  7. Senkov, O.N.; Shagiev, M.R.; Senkova, S.V.; Miracle, D.B. Precipitation of Al3(Sc, Zr) particles in an Al-Zn-Mg-Cu-Sc-Zr alloy during conventional solution heat treatment and its effect on tensile properties. Acta Mater. 2008, 56, 3723–3738. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  8. Forbord, B.; Lefebvre, W.; Danoix, F.; Hallem, H.; Marthinsen, K. Three dimensional atom probe investigation on the formation of Al3(Sc, Zr)-dispersoids in aluminium alloys. Scripta Mater. 2004, 51, 333–337. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  9. Wu, H.; Wen, S.P.; Huang, H.; Li, B.L.; Wu, X.L.; Gao, K.Y.; Wang, W.; Nie, Z.R. Effects of homogenization on precipitation of Al3(Er, Zr) particles and recrystallization behavior in a new type Al-Zn-Mg-Er-Zr alloy. Mater. Sci. Eng. A 2017, 689, 313–322. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Leibner, M.; Vlach, M.; Kodetová, V.; Kudrnová, H.; Veselý, J.; Zikmund, S.; Čížek, J.; Melikhova, O.; Lukáč, F. Effect of deformation on evolution of Al3(Er, Zr) precipitates in Al-Er-Zr-based alloy. Mater. Charact. 2022, 186, 111781. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Peng, G.; Chen, K.; Fang, H.; Chen, S. A study of nanoscale Al3(Zr, Yb) dispersoids structure and thermal stability in Al–Zr–Yb alloy. Mater. Sci. Eng. A 2012, 535, 311–315. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Pang, H.C.; Shang, P.J.; Huang, L.P.; Chen, K.H.; Liu, G.; Xiong, X. Precipitates and precipitation behavior in Al–Zr–Yb–Cr alloys. Mater. Lett. 2012, 75, 192–195. [Google Scholar]
  13. Hu, T.; Ruan, Z.; Fan, T.; Wang, K.; He, K.; Wu, Y. First-principles investigation of the diffusion of TM and the nucleation and growth of L12 Al3TM particles in Al alloys. Crystals 2023, 13, 1032. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Fan, T.; Ruan, Z.; Zhong, F.; Xie, C.; Li, X.; Chen, D.; Tang, P.; Wu, Y. Nucleation and growth of L12-Al3RE particles in aluminum alloys: A first-principles study. J. Rare Earths 2023, 41, 1116–1126. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Zhang, Y.; Gu, J.; Tian, Y.; Gao, H.; Wang, J.; Sun, B. Microstructure evolution and mechanical property of Al–Zr and Al–Zr–Y alloys. Mater. Sci. Eng. A 2014, 616, 132–140. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Gao, H.; Feng, W.; Wang, Y.; Gu, J.; Zhang, Y.; Wang, J.; Sun, B. structure and compositional evolution of Al3(Zr, Y) precipitates in Al-Zr-Y alloy. Mater. Charact. 2016, 121, 195–198. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Wang, Y.; Miao, Y.; Peng, P.; Gao, H.; Wang, J.; Sun, B. Ab initio investigation on preferred orientation at the Al/Al3(Zr, Y) interface in Al–Zr–Y alloy. J. Appl. Phys. 2022, 131, 225111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Song, Y.; Zhan, S.; Nie, B.; Liu, S.; Qi, H.; Liu, F.; Fan, T.; Chen, D. First-principle investigation of the interface properties of the core-shelled L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Zr, Er, Y) phase. Crystals 2023, 13, 420. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Dorin, T.; Babaniaris, S.; Jiang, L.; Cassel, A.; Eggeman, A.; Robson, J. Precipitation sequence in Al-Sc-Zr alloys revisited. Materialia 2022, 26, 101608. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Booth-Morrison, C.; Dunand, D.C.; Seidman, D.N. Coarsening resistance at 400 °C of precipitation-strengthened Al–Zr–Sc–Er alloys. Acta Mater. 2011, 59, 7029–7042. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Leibner, M.; Vlach, M.; Kodetová, V.; Veselý, J.; Čížek, J.; Kudrnová, H.; Lukáč, F. On the Sc-rich core of Al3(Sc, Er, Zr) precipitates. Mater. Lett. 2022, 325, 132759. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Qian, W.; Zhao, Y.; Kai, X.; Gao, X.; Huang, L.; Miao, C. Characteristics of microstructureand mechanical evolution in 6111Al alloy containing Al3(Er, Zr) nanoprecipitates. Mater. Charact. 2021, 178, 111310. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Zhang, J.; Hu, T.; Yi, D.; Wang, H.; Wang, B. Double-shell structure of Al3(Zr, Sc) precipitate induced by thermomechanical treatment of Al–Zr–Sc alloy cable. J. Rare Earths 2019, 37, 668–672. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Zhang, C.; Jiang, Y.; Cao, F.; Hu, T.; Wang, Y.; Yin, D. Formation of coherent, core-shelled nano-particles in dilute Al-Sc-Zr alloys from the first-principles. J. Mater. Sci. Technol. 2019, 35, 930–938. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Zhang, C.; Yin, D.; Jiang, Y.; Wang, Y. Precipitation of L12-phase nano-particles in dilute Al-Er-Zr alloys from the first-principles. Comp. Mater. Sci. 2019, 162, 171–177. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Liu, X.; Wang, Q.; Zhao, C.; Li, H.; Wang, M.; Chen, D.; Wang, H. Formation of ordered precipitates in Al-Sc-Er-(Si/Zr) alloy from first-principles study. J. Rare Earths 2023, 9, 609–620. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Nityananda, R.; Hohenberg, P.; Kohn, W. Inhomogeneous electron gas. Resonance 2017, 22, 809–811. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Kresse, G.; Furthmüller, J. Efficiency of ab-initio total energy calculations for metals and semiconductors using a plane-wave basisset. Comp. Mater. Sci. 1996, 6, 15–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  29. Kresse, G.; Joubert, D. From ultrasoft pseudopotentials to the projector augmented-wave method. Phys. Rev. B 1999, 59, 1758–1775. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Perdew, J.P.; Burke, K.; Ernzerhof, M. Generalized Gradient Approximation Made Simple. Phys. Rev. Lett. 1998, 77, 3865–3868. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  31. Budimir, M.; Damjanovic, D.; Setter, N. Piezoelectric Response and Free Energy Instability in the Perovskite Crystals BaTiO3, PbTiO3 and Pb(Zr, Ti)O3. Phys. Rev. B 2006, 73, 4106. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  32. Baroni, S.; De Gironcoli, S.; Dal Corso, A.; Giannozzi, P. Phonons and related crystal properties from density-functional perturbation theory. Rev. Mod. Phys. 2001, 73, 515. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
  33. Mao, Z.; Chen, W.; Seidman, D.N.; Wolverton, C. First-principles study of the nucleation and stability of ordered precipitates in ternary Al–Sc–Li alloys. Acta Mater. 2011, 59, 3012–3023. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Swan-Wood, T.L.; Delaire, O.; Fultz, B. Vibrational entropy of spinodal decomposition in FeCr. Phys. Rev. B 2005, 72, 024305. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
Figure 1. Relationship between nuclear energy and the radii of various structures of Al3(Y, Zr) at the homogenization temperature of 673 K and the equal stoichiometric ratio.
Figure 1. Relationship between nuclear energy and the radii of various structures of Al3(Y, Zr) at the homogenization temperature of 673 K and the equal stoichiometric ratio.
Crystals 13 01228 g001
Figure 2. Relationship between nuclear energy and the radii of various structures of L12-Al3(N, Zr) (N = Er, Y, Sc) at the homogenization temperature of 673 K and the equal stoichiometric ratio.
Figure 2. Relationship between nuclear energy and the radii of various structures of L12-Al3(N, Zr) (N = Er, Y, Sc) at the homogenization temperature of 673 K and the equal stoichiometric ratio.
Crystals 13 01228 g002
Table 1. The corresponding enthalpy difference and vibration entropy difference of L12-Al3M phase precipitation.
Table 1. The corresponding enthalpy difference and vibration entropy difference of L12-Al3M phase precipitation.
Δ H f A l 3 M Δ H f A l n M (eV/Atom) Δ S v i b A l 3 M Δ S v i b A l n M (kB/Atom)
Al3Sc-AlnSc−0.718−0.776 [24]3.352.67 [24]
Al3Zr-AlnZr−0.667−0.831 [24]4.012.72 [24]
Al3Er-AlnEr−0.823−0.867 [25]5.183.53 [25]
Al3Y-AlnY−0.902-5.72-
Table 2. Critical nucleation radius and critical nucleation work.
Table 2. Critical nucleation radius and critical nucleation work.
Critical Nucleation Radius (Å)Critical Nucleation Work (J)
PresentRef.PresentRef.
Al3Sc5.956.6 [24]2.01 × 10−192.9 × 10−19 [24]
Al3Zr3.892.9 [24]4.83 × 10−202.9 × 10−20 [24]
Al3Er9.578.4 [25]6.94 × 10−195.4 × 10−19 [25]
Al3Y9.40-6.84 × 10−19-
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Liu, S.; Liu, F.; Yan, Z.; Nie, B.; Fan, T.; Chen, D.; Song, Y. Nucleation of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) Nanophases in Aluminum Alloys: A First-Principles ThermodynamicsStudy. Crystals 2023, 13, 1228. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst13081228

AMA Style

Liu S, Liu F, Yan Z, Nie B, Fan T, Chen D, Song Y. Nucleation of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) Nanophases in Aluminum Alloys: A First-Principles ThermodynamicsStudy. Crystals. 2023; 13(8):1228. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst13081228

Chicago/Turabian Style

Liu, Shuai, Fangjun Liu, Zhanhao Yan, Baohua Nie, Touwen Fan, Dongchu Chen, and Yu Song. 2023. "Nucleation of L12-Al3M (M = Sc, Er, Y, Zr) Nanophases in Aluminum Alloys: A First-Principles ThermodynamicsStudy" Crystals 13, no. 8: 1228. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst13081228

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop