Papers by Keyword: Vacancy-Wind Effect

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Abstract: First discovered by the late Dr John Manning, the vacancy-wind effect is a subtle phenomenon that occurs when two or more atomic species compete for vacancies in a net vacancy flux. The vacancy-wind effect is incorporated in (for example) the vacancy-wind or Manning factor that appears in the Darken-Manning Equation relating the interdiffusivity, the tracer diffusivities and the thermodynamic factor. The mechanism of the vacancy-wind phenomenon has long been very poorly understood. Recently, a moving reference frame Monte Carlo method was used to illustrate graphically how the vacancy-wind effect operates in both ionic conductivity in an ionic solid with a dilute solute and chemical interdiffusion in concentrated alloys and ionic compounds. That strategy is extended in this paper to show graphically how the vacancy-wind effect operates in interdiffusion in a stoichiometric intermetallic taking the B2 structure. A simple 4-frequency vacancy diffusion model is used. In previous work, it was shown that depending on composition and temperature, this model can exhibit the six-jump-cycle mechanism. It is shown that in the limit of perfect order that there is no vacancy-wind effect associated with this mechanism when both types of cycle operate equally (zero net vacancy flux). The non-unity value of the vacancy-wind factor found for this mechanism under zero vacancy flux conditions is purely a consequence of a particular geometric mix of tracer and collective atom displacements. The concept that a non-zero off-diagonal phenomenological coefficient provides the vacancy-wind effect is verified.
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Abstract: The non-random interaction of vacancies with atoms during interdiffusion and ionic conductivity is referred to as the vacancy-wind effect. This effect, first discovered by the late Dr John Manning, is a subtle phenomenon arising from the non-random distribution of vacancies with respect to a given moving atom within a net flux of vacancies. Recently, a good deal of progress has been made in determining accurate expressions for vacancy-wind factors in binary and ternary alloys, and in mixed cation ionic systems. The present paper provides an overview of these recent findings and puts them into a broader and historical context.
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