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Award Abstract # 0704045
Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Phase Transformations in Complex Non-Equilibrium Systems

NSF Org: DMR
Division Of Materials Research
Recipient: RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY
Initial Amendment Date: August 29, 2007
Latest Amendment Date: June 17, 2009
Award Number: 0704045
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Daryl Hess
dhess@nsf.gov
 (703)292-4942
DMR
 Division Of Materials Research
MPS
 Directorate for Mathematical and Physical Sciences
Start Date: September 1, 2007
End Date: August 31, 2012 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $381,000.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $381,000.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2007 = $127,000.00
FY 2008 = $127,000.00

FY 2009 = $127,000.00
History of Investigator:
  • Armen Khachaturyan (Principal Investigator)
    khach@jove.rutgers.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: Rutgers University New Brunswick
3 RUTGERS PLZ
NEW BRUNSWICK
NJ  US  08901-8559
(848)932-0150
Sponsor Congressional District: 12
Primary Place of Performance: Rutgers University New Brunswick
3 RUTGERS PLZ
NEW BRUNSWICK
NJ  US  08901-8559
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
12
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): M1LVPE5GLSD9
Parent UEI:
NSF Program(s): CONDENSED MATTER & MAT THEORY
Primary Program Source: app-0107 
01000809DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT

01000910DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 7237, 7569, 9161, AMPP
Program Element Code(s): 176500
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.049

ABSTRACT

TECHNICAL SUMMARY:

This award supports theoretical and computational materials theory and education with a focus on non-equilibrium systems. The great majority of materials with advanced technological properties are non-equilibrium systems. Their most valuable properties are usually obtained when a material is in a metastable or transient state and its structure is a coherent nano-scale mixture of structurally and compositionally different phases. The mechanical, dielectric, magnetic, and other properties and their responses to the applied fields strongly depend on the microstructure morphology. Unexplored structural states are usually "hidden" in the nonequilibrium extension of the phase diagram. These states are expected in complex systems with several evolving internal thermodynamic parameters such as composition, crystal lattice structure, long-range atomic order, magnetization, polarization, and etc. A typical relaxation time for these parameters is usually very different, their driving forces are non-linearly coupled, and their evolution develops in a multidimensional phase space. Under these conditions, there are multiple transformation pathways in the space of these parameters leading to a succession of transient and metastable states with potentially unusual structures and properties.

The focus of this research is on a systematic theoretical and computational study of the structural and kinetic accessibility of transient states "hidden" in the nonequilibrium part of the phase diagram and the response of these states to the applied field describing the structure-property relations. The proposed theoretical research will study (i) the succession of transformations along the way to the equilibrium that is often difficult to foresee in advance, (ii) the ways of "channeling" transformation cascades along the pathways of our choice by a realistic 3D computational modeling of the evolution of the internal parameters, (iii) the structure-property relations the response of the transient and metastable states to the applied fields, and (iv) the conceptually or practically important generic metal alloys and ceramic systems that represent important classes of multi-parametric phase transformations. These systems are: Fe-Ga bcc alloys with giant magnetostriction and an exceptionally large elastic softening, the Fe-Cu and Cu-Mn alloys with multiple structural states along the evolution path, the systems forming the checkerboard structures, and the ferroelectric solid solutions that, according to the Gibbs phase rule, have to decompose into a coherent mixture of different ferroic phases with a formation of complex assemblages of structural and polar domains. The latter is the area that has never been previously investigated.

The software that will enable realistic 3D simulations of multiple processes in complex materials systems will be developed. The code will be distributed to the researchers in the field. The PI will develop a new course "Theoretical and Computational Modeling of Advanced Materials" at senior undergraduate and graduate levels that will be based on the research.

NON-TECHNICAL SUMMARY:
This award supports theoretical and computational materials theory and education with a focus on materials that are in not in equilibrium but are in states that last for a very long time. The structure of these materials on length scales larger than that of an atom but still much smaller than the size of a thumb plays an important role in determining their properties and the pathways available to the processing of these materials. The PI will use theoretical and computational methods to study various prototype two-element systems that can yield alloys with interesting and technologically useful magnetic and structural properties. In these systems, structural, magnetic, and other properties may be linked together so that effects that change one property may change others as well. This is an important aspect that will captured by the research. The research has potential impact on condensed matter physics as well as materials science and engineering. The potential broad impact on materials and materials processing contributes to the effort to keep America competitive.

The computer simulation software that is developed in the course of the research will be distributed to the broader materials research community. The PI will develop a new course "Theoretical and Computational Modeling of Advanced Materials" at senior undergraduate and graduate levels that will be based on the research.



PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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G.A. Rossetti, A.G. Khachaturyan, G. Akcay, Y. Ni "Ferroelectric solid solutions with morphotropic boundaries: vanishing polarization anisotropy, adaptive, polar glass and two-phase states" Journal of Applied Physics , v.103 , 2008 , p.114113
J. Boisse, H. Zapolsky and A.G. Khachaturyan "Atomic-Scale Modeling of Nanostructures Formation in Fe-Ga Alloys with Giant Magnetostriction: Cascade Ordering and Decomposition" Acta Materialia , v.59 , 2011 , p.2656
Khachaturyan, AG "Ferroelectric solid solutions with morphotropic boundary: Rotational instability of polarization, metastable coexistence of phases and nanodomain adaptive states" PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE , v.90 , 2010 , p.37 10.1080/14786430903074789
Ni, Y; Khachaturyan, AG "From chessboard tweed to chessboard nanowire structure during pseudospinodal decomposition" NATURE MATERIALS , v.8 , 2009 , p.410 View record at Web of Science 10.1038/NMAT243
Ni, Y; Rao, WF; Khachaturyan, AG "Pseudospinodal Mode of Decomposition in Films and Formation of Chessboard-Like Nanostructure" NANO LETTERS , v.9 , 2009 , p.3275 View record at Web of Science 10.1021/nl901551
W.F. Rao and A. G. Khachaturyan "Giant Quasi-Elastic Responses in Decomposed Two-Phase Nanodispersions: Phase Field Modeling" Acta Materialia , v.60 , 2012 , p.443
W.F. Rao and A. G. Khachaturyan "Phase field theory of proper displacive phase transformations: structural anisotropy and directional flexibility, vector model, and transformation kinetics" Acta Materialia , v.59 , 2011 , p.4494
Y. Ni, A.G. Khachaturyan "From chessbord tweed to chessboard nanowire structure during pseudospinodal decomposition" Nature Materials , v.8 , 2009 , p.410
Y. Ni, A.G. Khachaturyan "Mechanism and conditions for the chessboard structure formation" Acta Materialia , v.55 , 2008 , p.4498 10.1016/j.actamat.2008.05.035

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