Mechanism governing electronic charge rearrangements in random alloys
ORAL
Abstract
Recent work [1] has computationally investigated the statistics of internal charge distribution and transfers in metallic high entropy alloys using various first-principle approaches. It demonstrated that fluctuating internal electrostatic (“Madelung”) potentials arise generically in random alloys, due to the random environments characterizing any given lattice site. In this work, we establish the physical mechanism governing the statistics of these fluctuations, by analytically formulating an appropriate self-consistent screening theory for random system. Our theory is based on perturbative approaches to disorder, as appropriate for metallic alloys. It suggests a path to formulate an appropriate extension of standard KKR-CPA methods, which is capable of capturing the fluctuations of the internal Madelung potentials, thus providing a computationally cheap yet accurate first-principle description of high entropy alloys.
[1] M. Karabin et al., J. Mater. Sci. 57, 10677-10690 (2022).
[1] M. Karabin et al., J. Mater. Sci. 57, 10677-10690 (2022).
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Presenters
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Wai-Ga D Ho
Florida State University
Authors
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Wai-Ga D Ho
Florida State University
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Mariia Karabin
Oak Ridge National Lab, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Yang Wang
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh Supercomput Ctr, Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
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Markus Eisenbach
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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George M Stocks
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Xianglin Liu
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
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Wasim R Mondal
Middle Tennessee State University
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Hanna Terletska
Middle Tennessee State University
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Ka-Ming Tam
Louisiana State University
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Liviu Chioncel
University of Augsburg
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Vladimir Dobrosavljevic
Florida State University