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arxiv 2206.06222 v2 pith:4VG2QTE2 submitted 2022-06-13 cond-mat.mtrl-sci

Elucidating dislocation core structures in titanium nitride through high-resolution imaging and atomistic simulations

classification cond-mat.mtrl-sci
keywords dislocationcorebondingdifferentdislocationsstructurestypeschemical
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Although titanium nitride (TiN) is among the most extensively studied and thoroughly characterized thin-film ceramic materials, detailed knowledge of relevant dislocation core structures is lacking. By high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) of epitaxial single crystal (001)-oriented TiN films, we identify different dislocation types and their core structures. These include, besides the expected primary full a/2{110}<1$\bar{1}$0> dislocation, Shockley partial dislocations a/6{111}<11$\bar{2}$> and sessile Lomer edge dislocations a/2{100}<011>. Density-functional theory and classical interatomic potential simulations complement STEM observations by recovering the atomic structure of the different dislocation types, estimating Peierls stresses, and providing insights on the chemical bonding nature at the core. The generated models of the dislocation cores suggest locally enhanced metal-metal bonding, weakened Ti-N bonds, and N vacancy-pinning that effectively reduces the mobilities of {110}<1$\bar{1}$0> and {111}<11$\bar{2}$> dislocations. Our findings underscore that the presence of different dislocation types and their effects on chemical bonding should be considered in the design and interpretations of nanoscale and macroscopic properties of TiN.

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