An ab initio study of radiation damage effects on the magnetic structure of bulk Iron
ORAL
Abstract
A fundamental understanding of radiation damage effects in solids is of great importance in assisting the development of structural materials with improved mechanical properties for nuclear energy applications. In this presentation, we discuss our recent theoretical investigation on the magnetic structure evolution in bulk Fe after an energetic particle has disturbed the lattice by a displacement cascade. We applied a linear scaling ab initio method to the study of magnetic moment distributions in a low energy cascade for a series of time steps. The primary damage state and the evolution of the defects were simulated using molecular dynamics with a Finnis-Sinclair interatomic potential. We will show the statistics of the magnetic moments in the sample and discuss its relationship with the atomic volume distribution.
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Authors
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Yang Wang
Pittsburgh SuperComputer Center, Carnegie Mellon University
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G. Malcolm Stocks
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Center for Defect Physics, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Roger Stoller
Oak Ridge National Lab., Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Don Nicholson
Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National Lab., Computational Science and Mathematics Division, ORNL, ORNL, Oak Ridge National Lab
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Aurelian Rusanu
University of Tennessee, ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Markus Eisenbach
National Center for Computational Sciences, ORNL, ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory