2. Materials and Methods
Samples of In4Ba, Al4Ba, Al4Eu, Al4Sr, and Ga4Sr were prepared by arc-melting high purity metals with 111In-activity under argon in a small arc-furnace. Indium concentrations were very dilute at about at.%. As will be shown below, PAC signals exhibited minimal frequency distributions, indicating that sample preparation led to highly ordered crystals having low concentrations of point defects. Spectra from In4Ba samples exhibited only two signals characteristic of the In4Ba phase, indicating volume fractions of any minority phases, if present, were minimal. For other samples, the lack of PAC signals from other phases does not necessarily mean minimal minority-phase volume-fractions, because the PAC tracer is an impurity and may preferentially dissolve into the Al4Ba-structured phases. In all cases, PAC signals from the Al4Ba-structured phases are not affected by the presence of minority phases, so further characterization of sample composition by, for example, X-ray diffraction was not deemed to be necessary.
In order to check whether or not spectra were influenced by composition, some samples were prepared that had mean compositions with 16–17 at.% divalent metal and with about 22 at.% divalent metal based on masses of metals before melting. All these compounds appear as line compounds in binary phase diagrams, and are, therefore, expected to have very narrow phase fields. This means that sample compositions likely fell in the two-phase fields on either side of the Al4Ba phases, in which case values for the degree of nonstoichiometry, x in Al4+5xBa1−5x, are not known based on mean composition. As will be shown, PAC measurements did not exhibit a variation with composition, so there was not a need to measure compositions of the Al4Ba phases; instead, samples are referred to as divalent-metal rich or divalent-metal poor.
PAC measurements were made using a four-detector spectrometer with BaF
2 scintillators. More information about the setup and data reduction can be found in ref. [
16].
When PAC tracers are distributed between two inequivalent lattice sites at low temperature, the perturbation function will be given by the weighted sum of perturbation functions of the static form given by Equation (1):
where
and
are fractions of tracers at each lattice site and quadrupole interaction frequencies
and
are, in general, different because of different EFGs at the two sites.
At elevated temperature, diffusion of PAC tracers on aluminum sublattices in the Al
4Ba structure involves jumps between Al
1 and Al
2 sites. When such jumps occur at rates comparable to the inverse timescale of the PAC measurement, the perturbation function will exhibit features characteristic of stochastic fluctuations of the quadrupole interaction between the two EFG states. Fluctuations of this type, between two EFGs with collinear main principal axes of different magnitudes, were considered in detail by Achtziger and Witthuhn [
17].
The jump rates of tracers between the two sublattices are proportional to and , the rates of EFG fluctuation from site 1 to 2 and from site 2 to 1, respectively. It is convenient to define a dynamic parameter , where is the difference in quadrupole interaction frequencies of the two sites. The negative sign is used when EFGs have the same sign. In equilibrium, the distribution of tracers experiencing the two EFGs are related to fluctuation rates between EFGs by detailed balance: .
Empirical forms of
given in Equations (2) and (3) can be used as a convenient approximation to expressions given by Achtziger and Witthuhn. In the fast-fluctuation regime,
, Equation (3) can be used as-is, with the interaction frequency given by the weighted average of the two site EFGs,
where the negative sign is used when EFGs have opposite signs, and
. In the slow-fluctuation regime,
,
where
is a small unperturbed fraction, and interaction frequencies
and
are shifted from
and
toward
with the degree of shift proportional to
.
Achtziger and Witthuhn characterized progression of the perturbation function with increasing dynamic parameter in three regimes they called quasistatic, intermediate, and fast fluctuation domains corresponding to , , and , respectively. In order to describe results in the present work, it is convenient to consider the behavior divided into four regimes, which correspond to different ranges in temperature, as follows.
Low temperature—static regime. A sum of two PAC signals as in Equation (4) due to tracers distributed among the two Al sublattices. Additional signals arising from point defects such as vacancies will not be observed if defect concentrations are less than around 1%, which can be expected for a well-ordered intermetallic compound at low temperature. The values of quadrupole interaction frequencies
and
likely will decrease with increasing temperature due to thermal expansion and effects of lattice vibrations [
18]. Shifts of interaction frequencies and damping will be negligible because jump rates are very low.
Moderate temperature—slow-fluctuation regime. Tracer jumps occur on the timescale of the PAC measurement with dynamic parameter . Just as in the static regime, a sum of two PAC signals will be observed, but the spectrum is more appropriately described by Equation (5), because jump rates are sufficiently high to induce apparent shifts of interaction frequencies, and, depending on , damping may be detectable. Degrees of shifts and damping, if visible, increase with increasing temperature. Maximum damping occurs when such that .
Moderate temperature—rapid-fluctuation regime. Tracer jumps occur on the timescale of the PAC measurement with . A single PAC signal will be observed with damping due to fluctuating EFGs, as in Equation (3). Maximum damping occurs at , and damping now decreases with increasing temperature. The value of the dynamically averaged frequency will change with increasing temperature due to two effects: (1) changes in site fractions if r12 and r21 have different activation enthalpies and (2) further decreases in and due to their temperature dependences caused by thermal-expansion and lattice vibrations.
High temperature—motionally averaged regime. The fluctuation rate is now so large that the PAC signal does not exhibit any damping. The value of will continue to change with increasing temperature due to both effects present in the rapid-fluctuation regime.
As will be seen, measurement conditions present for systems in this study did not allow one to observe all four relaxation regimes in a single sample.
A large obstacle in analyzing spectra comes from small values in
, which puts a limit on maximum possible values of
and
in the slow-fluctuation regime, corresponding to
. Small enough values of
lead to exponential damping factors too small to measure. In studies of relaxation in the Au
3Cu-structured compounds, it was found that damping parameters smaller than about 1 MHz could not be determined reliably [
2,
5,
6,
7,
8]. For those systems, a single signal was present. In the current work, two signals are present in the slow-fluctuation regime. Interaction frequencies, site fractions, and fluctuation rates are correlated strongly enough to make it difficult to measure damping. Thus, the lower limit for measurable fluctuation rate in the slow-fluctuation regime is likely higher than in the previous work: 2 MHz, as an estimate.
Another obstacle comes from uncertainty in how much of observed temperature dependences of fitted quadrupole-interaction frequencies in the slow-fluctuation regime are due to thermal expansion and lattice vibrations and how much are due to EFG fluctuation. In two of the systems of the current work, it was possible to identify static and slow-fluctuation regimes, so that fluctuation rates could be extracted from fits.
Instead of using formulas from ref. [
17] to relate frequency shifts and damping to fluctuation rates, one can fit spectra to perturbation functions calculated numerically via
where
is the
qth eigenvalue of the Blume matrix and
Gq are time-independent factors that depend on projections of eigenvectors on the vector space and distribution of parent isotope among EFGs in the system [
19,
20]. The Blume matrix is constructed from Hamiltonians describing the quadrupole interactions experienced by probes in the two Al-sites and the rates of transition between the two interactions [
21]. The form of the Blume matrix suitable for fluctuations between two collinear EFGs is given in
Appendix A. Fits to Equation (6) were carried out using PolyPacFit [
22] with quadrupole interaction frequencies
and
, transition rates
r12 and
r21, and fractions of
111In in each lattice site,
f1 and
f2, as adjustable parameters.
3. Results
With the expectation that atomic jump rates will only be large enough to lead to observable relaxation above room temperature, most measurements were made between room temperature and the temperature above which PAC tracers diffused out of the sample during data collection. This upper temperature varied from system to system. For In4Ba and Al4Ba, spectra also were collected at −196 °C. The −196 °C measurements did not contribute to understanding of temperature dependences of fitted parameters but are included for completeness.
In all five systems, two axially symmetric quadrupole interactions were observed at low temperatures where diffusional motion was negligible compared to the 120-ns lifetime of the PAC level. Axial symmetry indicates the signals arise from tracers that substitute at regular lattice site and do not have nearby point defects, as the presence of a point defect would tend to break axial symmetry. It is natural to attribute the two observed signals as arising from tracers on the two Al-type sites rather than one Al-type site and the Ba site because of (1) the chemical similarity of the tracer parent isotope to the host element occupying the Al-type site, and (2) the good match between tracer atomic size and volumes of Al-sites.
Measurements are reviewed first for In4Ba, in which 111In is a host-element so that PAC tracers must be distributed equally between Al-type sites. Then, results are given for Al4Ba and Al4Eu, which exhibit similar temperature-dependences of quadrupole interaction frequencies. Finally, results are given for Al4Sr and Ga4Sr, which have temperature dependences of interaction frequencies that allow calculation of mean EFG reorientation rates.
3.1. In4Ba
PAC spectra for In
4Ba are shown in
Figure 3. They exhibit features typical of spectra in most systems studied in the present work. At 15 °C, two signals with equal site fractions (
) were observed; they are most readily seen when spectra are plotted in the frequency domain, with the trio of harmonics for each signal marked using trident symbols. At 200 °C frequencies are only partially resolved while at 650 °C the signals are collapsed into a single, averaged interaction. Amplitudes of the three harmonics deviate from values for a random polycrystalline sample (
,
,
, and
). This effect is known as texturing and occurs in samples that do not have uniform distribution of randomly oriented grains, which can be a result of sample preparation and annealing, especially for non-cubic materials.
Figure 4 shows fitted values of the fundamental frequencies of signals as functions of temperature. As can be seen, two signals are observed at lower temperature, and their frequencies decrease with increasing temperature, as expected because of thermal-expansion and lattice-vibration effects. Density-functional theory calculations of EFGs for Cd on the two In-sublattices in In
4Ba showed that the higher-frequency signal corresponds to tracers on In
1 (i.e., Al
1-type) sites [
23]. With increasing temperature, the two signals have merged and only one signal is visible.
Merging of the two signals is attributed to frequency-averaging, as described in more detail in
Appendix B. Tracer atoms jump back and forth between the two sublattices more and more rapidly as the temperature increases, going from the slow-fluctuation to fast-fluctuation regime at the merging temperature of about 450 °C. In the slow-fluctuation regime, spectra were fit well using values of
in Equation (5). This does not mean fluctuation rates (and jump rates) were zero, but rates were less than about 2 MHz, as explained above.
Temperature dependences of measured interaction frequencies caused by relaxation shifts overlap temperature dependences of the (not directly measured) static interaction frequencies caused by thermal expansion and lattice vibrations, and, unfortunately, it is not possible to resolve the two dependences. Expressed differently, it is not possible to determine the value of
at the temperature where measured frequencies merge (around 450 °C in
Figure 4). If it were, then it would have been possible to determine the values of
and
accurately. The merging of signals indicates that EFG fluctuations must be on a timescale comparable to the 120-ns lifetime of the PAC level. That is,
so that one can place 8 kHz as the lower limit for
and
. Thus, fluctuation rates and, by extension, tracer jump rates, are between 8 kHz and 2 MHz at 450 °C.
Based on typical diffusivity of metals in intermetallic compounds, one can reasonably assume that the spectrum measured at −196 °C corresponds to the static regime and that somewhere between that measurement and the signal merging spectra correspond to the slow-fluctuation regime. However, it is not possible to distinguish between these regimes in the In4Ba system. The upper three measurements correspond to the motionally averaged regime.
3.2. Al4Ba and Al4Eu
Temperature dependence of interaction frequencies of signals for Al
4Ba obtained through fits to Equation (5) below about 450 °C (static- and slow-fluctuation regimes) and to Equation (2) above 450 °C (motionally averaged regime) are shown in
Figure 5. The behavior is similar to that seen for In
4Ba but with exceptionally linear temperature dependences from liquid-nitrogen temperature to the frequency-merging temperature at 450 °C and again to 1000 °C. Spectra were collected for two samples, one made to have a slightly Ba-rich composition and the other to have Ba-poor composition. As can be seen, measured frequencies for both samples are in excellent agreement.
Figure 6 shows temperature dependences of measured quadrupole interaction frequencies in Al
4Eu. The behavior is very similar to that observed for Al
4Ba, again with very linear temperature dependences and good agreement between samples prepared to have Eu-rich and Eu-poor compositions. The temperature at which frequencies merge is lower, approximately 350 °C.
When the In PAC tracer is an impurity, as is the case for Al
4Ba and Al
4Eu, tracers will not, in general, be distributed equally between the two Al sublattices, as they must in the case of In
4Ba. The distribution may have a temperature dependence if there is a difference in activation enthalpies of
and
, since
. Site-fraction ratios for signals from Al
4Ba and Al
4Eu are plotted as a function of temperature in the slow-fluctuation regime in
Figure 7. As can be seen, there is little-to-no dependence on temperature or composition. Average site-fraction ratios, excluding the value at 429 °C, are 0.82(1) and 0.49(2) for Al
4Ba and Al
4Eu, respectively, where
is the fraction of tracers experiencing the larger quadrupole interaction frequency.
As was the case for In4Ba, damping factors in Equation (5) were too small to detect because temperature dependences of interaction frequencies led to small values of near . Thus, it was not possible to observe spectra characteristic of the rapid-fluctuation regime. Again, one can only place bounds on fluctuation rates at the merging temperature. That is, fluctuation rates are between 8 kHz and 2 MHz at 450 °C and 350 °C.
3.3. Al4Sr and Ga4Sr
Figure 8 shows frequency spectra for Al
4Sr measured at four temperatures. Below 725 °C, two signals were observed. As with Al
4Ba and Al
4Eu, there is little-to-no temperature dependence of site fractions with the average site fraction ratio of higher-frequency signal to lower-frequency
= 2.1(4). At 725 °C and above, a single signal was observed. Temperature dependences of the two frequencies are shown in
Figure 9.
Starting from low temperature, fundamental frequencies of both the signals decrease, but the lower frequency decreases faster than the upper one, so that frequencies initially diverge, at least up to 500 °C. For frequencies determined using empirical fits to Equation (5) (black dots and curves in
Figure 9), measured frequencies converge between 500 and 800 °C. This is interpreted to mean that spectra are in the static regime below 500 °C and in the slow-fluctuation regime between 500 and 800 °C so that the convergence is due to dynamically averaged shifts towards the average frequency. At 800 °C, the single signal indicates that the spectrum is at the cusp of the rapid-fluctuation regime.
Fits using Equation (5) gave varying degrees of damping, with
r12 or
r21 on the order of 2 MHz. There is a strong correlation among fluctuation rates, interaction frequencies, and site fractions above 500 °C, so it is difficult to obtain reliable values for
r12 or
r21 using the empirical expression. Therefore, spectra were fitted using the rigorous method embodied in Equation (6). To help reduce uncertainties in best-fit parameters, one can first reduce the number of adjustable parameters by assuming that the distribution of Cd daughter-tracers is the same as that of In parent-tracers, at least as an approximation. Defining
r as the average fluctuation rate,
, one can write
and
. For consistency,
is again taken to be the fraction of tracers in the Al site with higher interaction frequency. Since
, site fractions can be fitted using the site fraction ratio
so that
and
. Best-fit values of
obtained using Equation (6) are shown in
Figure 10 as an Arrhenius plot. The mean fluctuation rate, and hence the mean jump frequency, is seen to be thermally activated and has an activation enthalpy of 1.16(3) eV. Unlike fit results using Equation (5), fitted
static quadrupole interaction frequencies
and
, unaffected by relaxation shifts, are shown in
Figure 9 (red squares and curves).
Figure 11 shows time-domain and corresponding Fourier-amplitude spectra for Ga
4Sr at three temperatures. Unlike other compounds in this study, there is a strong temperature dependence of the site fractions. At room temperature, the spectrum is dominated by the lower-frequency signal. As temperature increases in the slow-fluctuation regime, the fraction of the higher frequency signal,
, becomes visible and increases. At the highest temperature, 690 °C, it is not possible to resolve whether a fit to two signals, as appropriate for the upper-end of the slow-fluctuation regime, or a fit to one signal, as appropriate for the low end of the fast-fluctuation regime, is more appropriate. An Arrhenius plot of the site fraction ratio is shown in
Figure 12. The activation enthalpy for
, which is equal to the difference in activation enthalpies of
and
, is −0.089(6) eV.
Figure 13 shows temperature dependences of the frequencies measured in Ga
4Sr. Values obtained using fits to the empirical model given in Equation (5) show convergence due to relaxation shifts in the slow-fluctuation regime between about 550 and 730 °C, whereas fits to Equation (6) show the temperature dependence of the static quadrupole interaction frequencies. Best-fit values of
r, defined as above, obtained using Equation (6) are shown in
Figure 14 as an Arrhenius plot. The average fluctuation frequency is seen to be thermally activated and has an activation enthalpy of 1.47(3) eV.
5. Conclusions
111In PAC was used to investigate tracer distribution and diffusion in five compounds with the Al4Ba structure. The measurements give the realization of a system in which dynamical averaging of two collinear EFGs is driven by tracer atoms jumping between two sublattices. In all compounds, two signals were observed at low temperature, and one signal was observed at high temperature. The quadrupole interaction frequencies of the signals were strongly temperature dependent.
For In4Ba, Al4Ba, and Al4Eu, differences in observed quadrupole frequencies decreased with increasing temperature until observed PAC signals merged. Above the merging temperature, a single PAC signal was observed due to motional averaging of the quadrupole interactions experienced by tracers as they jumped among sites with different interactions. Because the difference in interaction frequencies was small at the merge temperature, it was possible to conclude only that rates were between about 8 kHz and 2 MHz at the merge temperatures.
For Al4Sr and Ga4Sr, there was less decrease in the difference in static quadrupole interaction frequencies with increasing temperature caused by thermal expansion and lattice vibrations, so that it was possible to measure the degree of quadrupole relaxation and, by extension, interaction fluctuation rates as a function of temperature. The inter-sublattice jump frequencies were found to have activation enthalpies of 1.16 and 1.47 eV, respectively, for Al4Sr and Ga4Sr. This allowed determination of the rate at which tracers jump between unlike Al-type sites to within a correlation factor. This further allowed estimation of transverse diffusivity in these systems.