Glide Mobility of a-Type Edge Dislocations in Aluminum Nitride by Molecular Dynamics Simulation

ACS Omega. 2021 Dec 13;7(2):2015-2022. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.1c05483. eCollection 2022 Jan 18.

Abstract

Classical molecular dynamics simulations are performed to investigate the motion of a-type edge dislocations in wurtzite aluminum nitride (AlN). The nucleation and propagation of kinks are observed via the dislocation extraction algorithm. Our simulation results show that the nucleation energy of the kink pair in AlN is 1.2 eV and that the migration energy is 2.8 eV. The Peierls stress of the 1/3⟨112̅0⟩{101̅0} edge dislocation at 0 K is 15.9 GPa. The viscous motion of dislocations occurs when τ > τ p , and the dislocation velocity is inversely proportional to the temperature and directly proportional to the applied stress. Below room temperature, the value of the critical resolved shear stress (CRSS) on the prismatic plane is the lowest, which suggests that the dislocation mobility on the prismatic plane is the easiest. The CRSS on the pyramidal plane is always the highest at all temperatures, which suggests that pyramidal slip is the hardest among these three slip systems.