Energetic particle irradiation can cause surface ultra-smoothening, self-organized nanoscale pattern formation or degradation of the structural integrity of nuclear reactor components. A fundamental understanding of the mechanisms governing the selection among these outcomes has been elusive. Here we predict the mechanism governing the transition from pattern formation to flatness using only parameter-free molecular dynamics simulations of single-ion impacts as input into a multiscale analysis, obtaining good agreement with experiment. Our results overturn the paradigm attributing these phenomena to the removal of target atoms via sputter erosion: the mechanism dominating both stability and instability is the impact-induced redistribution of target atoms that are not sputtered away, with erosive effects being essentially irrelevant. We discuss the potential implications for the formation of a mysterious nanoscale topography, leading to surface degradation, of tungsten plasma-facing fusion reactor walls. Consideration of impact-induced redistribution processes may lead to a new design criterion for stability under irradiation. © 2011 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Norris, S. A., Samela, J., Bukonte, L., Backman, M., Djurabekova, F., Nordlund, K., … Aziz, M. J. (2011). Molecular dynamics of single-particle impacts predicts phase diagrams for large scale pattern formation. Nature Communications, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1280
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