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Predicting phase behavior of grain boundaries with evolutionary search and machine learning

Qiang Zhu, Amit Samanta, Bingxi Li, Robert E. Rudd and Timofey Frolov ()
Additional contact information
Qiang Zhu: University of Nevada
Amit Samanta: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Bingxi Li: University of California Davis
Robert E. Rudd: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Timofey Frolov: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Nature Communications, 2018, vol. 9, issue 1, 1-9

Abstract: Abstract The study of grain boundary phase transitions is an emerging field until recently dominated by experiments. The major bottleneck in the exploration of this phenomenon with atomistic modeling has been the lack of a robust computational tool that can predict interface structure. Here we develop a computational tool based on evolutionary algorithms that performs efficient grand-canonical grain boundary structure search and we design a clustering analysis that automatically identifies different grain boundary phases. Its application to a model system of symmetric tilt boundaries in Cu uncovers an unexpected rich polymorphism in the grain boundary structures. We find new ground and metastable states by exploring structures with different atomic densities. Our results demonstrate that the grain boundaries within the entire misorientation range have multiple phases and exhibit structural transitions, suggesting that phase behavior of interfaces is likely a general phenomenon.

Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-02937-2

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