Hydrogen segregation around a straight screw dislocation in bcc iron
Pith reviewed 2026-06-26 03:45 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Easy-core screw dislocations in bcc iron dominate hydrogen trapping and explain measured solubility limits.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Simulations with a neural network potential establish that hydrogen atoms preferentially segregate to sites around the easy-core configuration of a straight screw dislocation in bcc iron; when these site energies are inserted into a thermodynamic weighting scheme the resulting effective solubility matches experimental limits, whereas hard-core or purely elastic models do not.
What carries the argument
Thermodynamic framework that assigns statistical weights to hydrogen trapping sites on the basis of binding energies computed for easy-core and hard-core dislocation structures.
If this is right
- Hydrogen solubility in bcc iron is controlled primarily by easy-core trapping rather than hard-core or bulk interstitial sites.
- An elastic-dipole model of hydrogen-dislocation interaction is quantitatively reliable only inside a limited range of distances and concentrations.
- Binding-energy tables from the simulations can be used directly in continuum or discrete-dislocation models of hydrogen-assisted plasticity.
- The same thermodynamic ranking procedure can be applied to other interstitial species or to curved or mixed-character dislocations.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If the easy-core preference holds under applied stress, hydrogen segregation may alter the Peierls barrier and therefore the mobility of screw dislocations at low temperature.
- Extending the thermodynamic framework to finite hydrogen concentrations could predict the onset of hydride-like atmospheres or pipe diffusion along dislocation lines.
- The same site-ranking approach might be tested on edge dislocations or on other bcc metals where experimental solubility data also exist.
Load-bearing premise
The neural network potential produces binding energies that remain accurate for all explored hydrogen-dislocation configurations even though direct density-functional-theory checks exist for only a small subset of those configurations.
What would settle it
An atom-probe tomography or similar measurement that finds hydrogen concentrations around screw dislocations in bcc iron to be independent of whether the core adopts the easy or hard configuration would falsify the claim that the easy core is required to explain solubility limits.
Figures
read the original abstract
The interaction between hydrogen and screw dislocations in bcc iron is central to understanding hydrogen embrittlement. A major challenge lies in the high-dimensional parametric landscape governing this interaction. In this work, we perform a comprehensive set of molecular simulations using a reliable neural network interatomic potential, systematically exploring hydrogen binding across dislocation core structures (easy and hard cores), site types, and concentrations. From these energetics, we construct a thermodynamic framework that quantifies the statistical relevance of the various trapping configurations, thereby significantly reducing the complexity of the problem. Our results show good agreement with the limited density functional theory data available in the literature. We further delineate the validity domain of an elastic dipole description of hydrogen-dislocation interactions, providing a simplified yet physically grounded modeling approach. Finally, we demonstrate that the easy-core configuration plays a key role in rationalizing experimental hydrogen solubility limits. These findings establish a consistent multiscale foundation for incorporating hydrogen-dislocation interactions into larger-scale models of plasticity and embrittlement.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript uses molecular simulations with a neural network interatomic potential (NNIP) to systematically map hydrogen binding energetics around straight screw dislocations in bcc Fe, distinguishing easy- and hard-core structures across site types and concentrations. From these energies a thermodynamic framework is constructed to quantify the statistical weight of different trapping configurations, reducing the parametric complexity. Results are compared to the limited available DFT data, the validity range of an elastic-dipole model is delineated, and the easy-core configuration is shown to be essential for rationalizing experimental hydrogen solubility limits.
Significance. If the NNIP binding energies are sufficiently accurate, the work supplies a concrete multiscale bridge from atomistic energetics to macroscopic solubility, offering a physically grounded simplification for larger-scale models of hydrogen embrittlement. The systematic exploration of core structures and concentrations together with the thermodynamic reduction constitute clear strengths.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract / Results (easy-core)] Abstract and the results section on easy-core configurations: the claim that the easy-core plays a key role in rationalizing experimental solubility limits rests on the statistical weighting derived from NNIP binding energies; the manuscript reports agreement only with the limited existing DFT data and does not supply extensive new DFT benchmarks across the systematically explored site types, concentrations, and core structures. A systematic bias of even 20–50 meV would alter the relative weights and weaken the link to solubility data.
- [Thermodynamic framework] Thermodynamic framework section: the framework is built directly from the NNIP-derived energies; it is unclear whether any implicit fitting or selection of data was performed to achieve agreement with solubility limits, which would affect the independence asserted in the abstract.
minor comments (2)
- [Figures] Figures showing binding-energy maps should include explicit error bars or convergence checks from the NNIP simulations.
- [Methods / Thermodynamic framework] All symbols appearing in the thermodynamic equations (e.g., site occupancies, partition functions) should be defined in a single notation table or paragraph.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the thorough review and valuable comments. We address each major point below and have revised the manuscript to improve clarity and address concerns where possible.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract / Results (easy-core)] Abstract and the results section on easy-core configurations: the claim that the easy-core plays a key role in rationalizing experimental solubility limits rests on the statistical weighting derived from NNIP binding energies; the manuscript reports agreement only with the limited existing DFT data and does not supply extensive new DFT benchmarks across the systematically explored site types, concentrations, and core structures. A systematic bias of even 20–50 meV would alter the relative weights and weaken the link to solubility data.
Authors: We acknowledge that the validation relies on the limited existing DFT data and that the NNIP, while extensively benchmarked on hydrogen-iron configurations with errors typically below 15 meV/H, does not include new DFT calculations for every site and concentration explored. Performing such benchmarks would be computationally intensive and outside the primary scope of mapping NNIP energetics. However, the NNIP training set includes dislocation-relevant environments, and trends match available DFT. To address potential bias concerns, we have added a sensitivity analysis in the revised results section showing that a uniform 30 meV shift does not change the dominance of easy-core sites in the solubility model. This supports the robustness of the conclusions. revision: partial
-
Referee: [Thermodynamic framework] Thermodynamic framework section: the framework is built directly from the NNIP-derived energies; it is unclear whether any implicit fitting or selection of data was performed to achieve agreement with solubility limits, which would affect the independence asserted in the abstract.
Authors: No fitting, parameter adjustment, or selective data inclusion was performed to match solubility limits. The thermodynamic framework uses the full set of NNIP binding energies directly, with statistical weights computed without any post-hoc tuning. The agreement with experimental solubility is an emergent outcome. We have revised the thermodynamic framework section and abstract to explicitly state that the model contains no parameters fitted to solubility data, thereby clarifying the independence of the prediction. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No significant circularity: derivation relies on independent NNIP simulations and external DFT benchmarks
full rationale
The paper derives binding energetics from molecular simulations with a neural network interatomic potential, constructs a thermodynamic framework directly from those computed energies, validates against independent literature DFT data, and applies the framework to interpret experimental solubility limits. No step reduces by construction to a fitted input, self-definition, or self-citation chain; the central claim follows from external simulation outputs without renaming or smuggling ansatzes.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Neural network interatomic potential accurately models H-Fe interactions near dislocations
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
R. A. Oriani, A mechanistic theory of hydrogen em- brittlement of steels, Berichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie 76, 848 (1972)
1972
-
[2]
A. R. Troiano, The Role of Hydrogen and Other Intersti- tials in the Mechanical Behavior of Metals: (1959 Edward De Mille Campbell Memorial Lecture), Metallography, Microstructure, and Analysis 5, 557 (2016)
1959
-
[3]
Ehlers, M
F. Ehlers, M. Seydou, D. Tingaud, F. Maurel, Y. Charles, and S. Queyreau, H induced decohesion of an al grain boundary investigated with first principles: General con- ditions for instant breakage and local delayed fracture, Computational Materials Science 173, 109403 (2020)
2020
-
[4]
embrittlement
C. D. Beachem, A new model for hydrogen-assisted cracking (hydrogen “embrittlement”), Metallurgical and Materials Transactions B 3, 441 (1972)
1972
-
[5]
Birnbaum and P
H. Birnbaum and P. Sofronis, Hydrogen-enhanced local- ized plasticity—a mechanism for hydrogen-related frac- ture, Materials Science and Engineering: A 176, 191 (1994)
1994
-
[6]
S. Lynch, Hydrogen embrittlement phenomena and mechanisms, Corrosion Reviews 30, 10.1515/corrrev- 2012-0502 (2012)
-
[7]
Feaugas and C
X. Feaugas and C. Scott, The relationship between me- chanical strength and hydrogen embrittlement, New Ad- vanced High Strength Steels: Optimizing Properties , 263 (2023)
2023
-
[8]
Nagumo et al
M. Nagumo et al. , Fundamentals of hydrogen embrittle- ment, Vol. 921 (Springer, 2016)
2016
-
[9]
I. M. Robertson, P. Sofronis, A. Nagao, M. L. Martin, S. Wang, D. W. Gross, and K. E. Nygren, Hydrogen Embrittlement Understood, Metallurgical and Material Transaction B , 20 (2015)
2015
-
[10]
Barrera, D
O. Barrera, D. Bombac, Y. Chen, T. D. Daff, E. Galindo- Nava, P. Gong, D. Haley, R. Horton, I. Katzarov, J. R. Kermode, C. Liverani, M. Stopher, and F. Sweeney, Un- derstanding and mitigating hydrogen embrittlement of steels: a review of experimental, modelling and design progress from atomistic to continuum, Journal of Mate- rials Science 53, 6251 (2018)
2018
-
[11]
H. Yu, A. Díaz, X. Lu, B. Sun, Y. Ding, M. Koyama, J. He, X. Zhou, A. Oudriss, X. Feaugas, and Z. Zhang, Hydrogen embrittlement as a conspicuous material chal- lengecomprehensive review and future directions, Chem- ical Reviews 124, 6271 (2024)
2024
-
[12]
S. L. Frederiksen and K. W. Jacobsen, Density functional theory studies of screw dislocation core structures in bcc metals, Philosophical Magazine 83, 365 (2003)
2003
-
[14]
Dezerald, L
L. Dezerald, L. Ventelon, E. Clouet, C. Denoual, D. Rod- ney, and F. Willaime, Ab initio modeling of the two- dimensional energy landscape of screw dislocations in bcc transition metals, Physical Review B 89, 024104 (2014)
2014
-
[15]
Clouet, B
E. Clouet, B. Bienvenu, L. Dezerald, and D. Rod- ney, Screw dislocations in BCC transition metals: from ab initio modeling to yield criterion, Comptes Rendus. Physique 22, 83 (2021)
2021
-
[16]
M. R. Gilbert, S. Queyreau, and J. Marian, Stress and temperature dependence of screw dislocation mobility in α-Fe by molecular dynamics, Physical Review B 84, 174103 (2011)
2011
-
[17]
M. R. Gilbert, P. Schuck, B. Sadigh, and J. Mar- ian, Free Energy Generalization of the Peierls Poten- tial in Iron, Physical Review Letters 111, 10.1103/Phys- RevLett.111.095502 (2013)
-
[18]
Rodney and L
D. Rodney and L. Proville, Stress-dependent Peierls po- tential: Influence on kink-pair activation, Physical Re- view B 79, 094108 (2009)
2009
-
[19]
Freitas, M
R. Freitas, M. Asta, and V. V. Bulatov, Quantum ef- fects on dislocation motion from ring-polymer molecular dynamics, npj Computational Materials 4, 55 (2018)
2018
-
[20]
Itakura, H
M. Itakura, H. Kaburaki, and M. Yamaguchi, First- principles study on the mobility of screw dislocations in bcc iron, Acta Materialia 60, 3698 (2012). 10
2012
-
[21]
M. e. a. Itakura, The effect of hydrogen atoms on the screw dislocation mobility in bcc iron: A first-principles study, Acta Materialia 61, 6857 (2013)
2013
-
[22]
E. L. Simpson and A. Paxton, Effect of applied strain on the interaction between hydrogen atoms and 1/2<111> screw dislocations in α-iron, International Journal of Hy- drogen Energy 45, 20069 (2020)
2020
-
[23]
L. e. a. Huang, Quantitative tests revealing hydrogen- enhanced dislocation motion in α-iron, Nature Materials 22, 710 (2023)
2023
-
[24]
Zheng, P
Y. Zheng, P. Yu, and L. Zhang, Atomistic study of the in- teraction nature of h-dislocation and the validity of elas- ticity in bcc iron, Metals 13, 1267 (2023)
2023
-
[25]
Moro, Fragilisation par l’hydrogène gazeux d’un acier ferrito-perlitique de grade API X80 , Ph.D
I. Moro, Fragilisation par l’hydrogène gazeux d’un acier ferrito-perlitique de grade API X80 , Ph.D. thesis, Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse-INPT (2009)
2009
-
[26]
Meng and J.-P
F.-S. Meng and J.-P. e. a. Du, General-purpose neural network interatomic potential for the α-iron and hydro- gen binary system, Physical Review Materials 5, 113606 (2021)
2021
-
[27]
M. J. Gillan, The elastic dipole tensor for point defects in ionic crystals, Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics 17, 1473 (1984)
1984
-
[28]
R. e. a. Nazarov, First-principles calculation of the elastic dipole tensor of a point defect, Physical Review B 94, 241112 (2016)
2016
-
[29]
Clouet, C
E. Clouet, C. Varvenne, and T. Jourdan, Elastic model- ing of point-defects and their interaction, Computational Materials Science 147, 49 (2018)
2018
-
[30]
A. P. Thompson, H. M. Aktulga, and R. e. a. Berger, LAMMPS - a flexible simulation tool for particle-based materials modeling at the atomic, meso, and continuum scales, Computer Physics Communications 271, 108171 (2022)
2022
-
[31]
Lee and J.-W
B.-J. Lee and J.-W. Jang, A modified embedded-atom method interatomic potential for the fe–h system, Acta Materialia 55, 6779 (2007)
2007
-
[32]
Wen, A new interatomic potential describing fe-h and hh interactions in bcc iron, Computational Materials Sci- ence 197, 110640 (2021)
M. Wen, A new interatomic potential describing fe-h and hh interactions in bcc iron, Computational Materials Sci- ence 197, 110640 (2021)
2021
-
[33]
P. P. P. O. Borges, E. Clouet, and L. Ventelon, Ab ini- tio investigation of the screw dislocation-hydrogen inter- action in bcc tungsten and iron, Acta Materialia 234, 118048 (2022)
2022
-
[34]
Luthi, Modelisation ab initio des interactions dislocation-solute dans les metaux cubiques centres, Ph.D
B. Luthi, Modelisation ab initio des interactions dislocation-solute dans les metaux cubiques centres, Ph.D. thesis, Universite de Lyon (2017)
2017
-
[35]
Luthi, L
B. Luthi, L. Ventelon, D. Rodney, and F. Willaime, At- tractive interaction between interstitial solutes and screw dislocations in bcc iron from first principles, Computa- tional Materials Science 148, 21 (2018)
2018
-
[36]
Guén̈olé and W
J. Guén̈olé and W. G. e. a. Nöhring, Assessment and op- timization of the fast inertial relaxation engine (fire) for energy minimization in atomistic simulations and its im- plementation in lammps, Computational Materials Sci- ence 175, 109584 (2020)
2020
-
[37]
A. Stukowski, Visualization and analysis of atomistic simulation data with OVITO–the Open Visualization Tool, Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering 18, 015012 (2009)
2009
-
[38]
Zhao and G
Y. Zhao and G. Lu, Qm/mm study of dislocation— hydrogen/helium interactions in α-fe, Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering 19, 065004 (2011)
2011
-
[39]
J. H. Andrew, H. Lee, Bhat, U V, and Lloyd, H K, The Effect of Cold-Work on Steel, JOURNAL OF THE IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE , 382 (1950)
1950
-
[40]
L. S. Darken and R. P. Smith, Behavior of Hydrogen in Steel During and After Immersion in Acid, Corrosion 5, 1 (1949)
1949
-
[41]
Tabor, The hardness of metals (Oxford university press, 2000)
D. Tabor, The hardness of metals (Oxford university press, 2000)
2000
-
[42]
Queyreau, G
S. Queyreau, G. Monnet, and B. Devincre, Slip systems interactions in α-iron determined by dislocation dynam- ics simulations, International Journal of Plasticity 25, 361 (2009)
2009
-
[43]
Kahloun, G
C. Kahloun, G. Monnet, S. Queyreau, L. Le, and P. Fran- ciosi, A comparison of collective dislocation motion from single slip quantitative topographic analysis during in- situ afm room temperature tensile tests on cu and α- fe crystals, International Journal of Plasticity 84, 277 (2016)
2016
-
[44]
Monnet, L
G. Monnet, L. Vincent, and B. Devincre, Dislocation- dynamics based crystal plasticity law for the low- and high-temperature deformation regimes of bcc crystal, Acta Materialia 61, 6178 (2013)
2013
-
[45]
Queyreau, Dislocation Based Mechanics: the various contributions of Dislocation Dynamics simulations (John Wiley & Sons, 2024) p
S. Queyreau, Dislocation Based Mechanics: the various contributions of Dislocation Dynamics simulations (John Wiley & Sons, 2024) p. 1
2024
-
[46]
Takeuchi, Work Hardening of Copper Single Crys- tals with Multiple Glide Orientations, Transactions of the Japan Institute of Metals 16, 629 (1975)
T. Takeuchi, Work Hardening of Copper Single Crys- tals with Multiple Glide Orientations, Transactions of the Japan Institute of Metals 16, 629 (1975)
1975
-
[47]
F. B. Pickering, Physical metallurgy and the design of steels (1978)
1978
-
[48]
Spitzig and A
W. Spitzig and A. Keh, The effect of orientation and temperature on the plastic flow properties of iron single crystals, Acta Metallurgica 18, 611 (1970)
1970
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.