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Publication date: Apr 16, 2025
This archive includes the raw data for atomistic simulations in the work as titled. Transition to a hydrogen-based economy requires a thorough understanding of hydrogen interaction with dislocations in metals, especially in body-centered cubic (BCC) steels. Past experimental and computational investigations regarding these interactions often demonstrate two opposing results: hydrogen-induced mobility or hydrogen-induced pinning of dislocations. Through in-situ scanning electron microscopy experiments enabled by a custom-built setup, we address here this discrepancy. Our experiments reveal hydrogen-induced dislocation motion in a BCC metal at room temperature. Interestingly however, we also observe that the same dislocations are later pinned as well, again induced by the steady hydrogen flux. Molecular dynamics simulations of the phenomena confirm the attraction of the dislocations towards the hydrogen flux, and the pinning that follows after, upon increased hydrogen trapping at the dislocation core. Future experimental or computational studies of hydrogen thus should take into account these different regimes in order to present a full picture of hydrogen defect interactions.
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File name | Size | Description |
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figure_3.tar
MD5md5:3eede9a7d40f875a7344d81b959dcc19
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3.3 MiB | The initial and final atomic structures for Figure 3 and Video S4. |
example_H_disl_binding.lmp.gz
MD5md5:9031db7fd1d90f1f823632befc85a4c6
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3.4 MiB | One example of the H atom - dislocation binding configuration as discussed in Figure 4. |
figure_5a_optimized.tar
MD5md5:0a7a20ec2d538f232bbb53d0a0906d18
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1.7 GiB | The optimized atomic structures along the minimum energy path as shown in Figure 5a. |
figure_5c_optimized.tar
MD5md5:f8442f9c1dcb580d91dbf9f8bf109621
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2.3 GiB | The optimized atomic structures along the minimum energy paths as shown in Figure 5c. |
2025.60 (version v1) [This version] | Apr 16, 2025 | DOI10.24435/materialscloud:nt-5q |