Abstract

Alpha-zirconium is a hydrogen host material used in nuclear energy and semiconducting applications due to Zr's excellent properties such as corrosion resistance, low thermal neutrons cross-section, and thermodynamically favorable interstitial sequestering of H atoms. Herein we use density functional theory simulations to systematically analyze the initial stages of H insertion in the Zr matrix, and determine optimal hydrogen localization, distribution, and clustering tendencies from a thermodynamics and kinetics perspective. Our results suggest that H occupation of tetrahedral sites is strongly favored, consistent with previous experimental and theoretical studies. Further, a cooperative effect in H localization is shown where H atoms favor clustering. The H pair is found to be the most stable by occupying tetrahedral sites with pairs at second nearest-neighbor positions (TTn2). Among the four H atom clusters, the most favorable configuration has two TTn2 pairs forming “box” or “zig-zag” shaped-cluster with the pairs separated by 3.03 or 3.25 Å, respectively. Nudged elastic band simulations suggest that the formation of TTn2 is facile and is limited by the small diffusion barrier of the monomer of less than 0.1 eV. Further, the formation routes for the 4H atom clusters are also presented. The current study can serve as a foundation to systematically model H atom clustering in metals and alloys.

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