Atomistic Models of Long-Term Hydrogen Diffusion in Metals


ISSN 1121-7588
M. P. Ariza1, K. G. Wang2, and M. Ortiz3
1Escuela Tecnica Superior Ingenieria, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla 41092, Spain
2Aerospace and Ocean Engineering, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA
3Division of Engineering and Applied Science, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA

Abstract

The effective and efficient storage of hydrogen is one of the key challenges in developing a hydrogen economy. Recently, intensive research has been focused on developing and optimizing metal-based nanomaterials for high-speed, high-capacity, reversible hydrogen storage applications. Notably, the absorption and desorption of hydrogen in nanomaterials is characterized by an atomic, deformation-diffusion coupled process with a time scale of the order of seconds to hours–far be-yond the time windows of existing simulation technologies such as Molecular Dynamics (MD) and Monte Carlo (MC) methods. In this work, we present a novel deformation-diffusion coupled computational framework, which allows the long-term simulation of such slow processes and at the same time maintains a strictly atomistic description of the material. Specifically, we first propose a theory of non-equilibrium statistical thermodynamics for multi-species particulate solids based on Jayne’s maximum entropy principle and the meanfield approximation approach. This non-equilibrium statistical thermodynamics model is then coupled with novel discrete kinetics laws, which governs the diffusion of mass–and possibly also conduction of heat–at atomic scale. Finally, this thermo-chemo-mechanical coupled system is solved numerically using a staggered procedure. The salient features of this computational framework are demonstrated in the simulation of a specific hydrogen diffusion problem using palladium nanofilms, which comes with a simulation time of one second. More generally, the proposed computational framework can be considered as an ideal tool for the study of many deformation-diffusion coupled phenomena in hydrogen-storage-related applications including, but not limited to, hydrogen embrittlement, grain boundary diffusion, and various cyclic behaviors.
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