Analysis of Dynamical Peculiarities in Nanoalloys at Subsystems Level: Dynamical Degrees of Freedom, Temperature Differences, and the Chameleon Effect

Analysis of Dynamical Peculiarities in Nanoalloys at Subsystems Level: Dynamical Degrees of Freedom, Temperature Differences, and the Chameleon Effect

Vibrational temperatures of pure and mixed 13-atom Ni/Al clusters as a function of the cluster composition and internal energy.


Abstract

A novel analysis of the dynamical behavior of nanoalloy systems, as represented by model Ni/Al 13-atom clusters, over a broad range of energies that cover the stage-wise transition of the systems from their solid-like to liquid-like state is presented. Conceptually, the analysis is rooted in partitioning the systems into judiciously chosen subsystems and characterizing the latter in terms of subsystem-specific dynamical descriptors that include dynamical degrees of freedom, root-mean-square bond-length fluctuation, and element-specific subsystem temperature. The analysis reveals a host of intriguing new peculiarities in the dynamical behavior of the Ni/Al 13-mers, among which are what we call the chameleon effect and the difference in the temperatures of the Ni and Al subsystems at high energies, a difference that strongly depends on the cluster composition and also changes with energy. These do not have an analog in pure Ni13 and Al13 and are explained in terms of the coupled effects of the difference between the masses of the Ni and Al atoms (the mass effect) and of the difference in the anharmonicity of the overall interaction potential as experienced by the Ni and Al subsystems of the clusters (the potential effect).