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Article

Structural, Electronic, Magnetic, Mechanic and Thermodynamic Properties of the Inverse Heusler Alloy Ti2NiIn Under Pressure

School of Physical Science and Technology, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Crystals 2018, 8(11), 429; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst8110429
Submission received: 10 October 2018 / Revised: 9 November 2018 / Accepted: 13 November 2018 / Published: 15 November 2018

Abstract

:
Structural, electronic, magnetic and mechanic properties of the inverse Heusler alloy Ti2NiIn under different pressure are systematically studied with density functional theory (DFT). The equilibrium lattice constant and electronic band structure at null pressure are obtained to be consistent with previous work. Under currently applied static pressure from 0 GPa to 50 GPa, it is found that the half-metallicity of the material is maintained and the total magnetic moment (Mt) is kept at 3 µB, which obeys the Slater–Pauling rule, Mt = Zt − 18, where Zt is the total number of valence electrons. Besides, the effect of the tetragonal distortion was studied and it is found that the magnetic property of Ti2NiIn is almost unchanged. Several mechanical parameters are calculated including three elastic constants, bulk modulus B, Young’s modulus E, and shear modulus S and the mechanical stability is examined accordingly. Furthermore, the thermodynamic properties, such as the heat capacity CV, the thermal expansion coefficient α, the Grüneisen constant γ and the Debye temperature ΘD, are computed by using the quasi-harmonic Debye model within the same pressure range at a series of temperature from 0 to 1500 K. This theoretical study provides detailed information about the inverse Heusler compound Ti2NiIn from different aspects and can further lead some insight on the application of this material.

1. Introduction

During the last decade, half-metallic materials (HMMs) have attracted tremendous attention and become of great interest because they can provide novel functionalities for spintronic [1] and magneto-electronic materials [2,3]. The electronic structure of HMMs shows metallic behavior with no band gap for one channel and semiconducting behavior with band gap in the other channel, leading to a possible 100% spin polarization of electrons near the Fermi energy level [4,5]. Among these materials, the Heusler alloy family stands out because of its high Curie temperature and tunable physical properties [6,7,8]. Besides, the Heusler materials have comparable crystal structure with zinc-blende-type and rock-salt-type semiconductors [9,10,11], making them suitable for the spin injection source of semiconductors. The first-principles calculations have been successfully and extensively applied to study the physical properties of Heusler alloys, including electronic property, magnetic property, mechanical property, etc. Many Heusler compounds have been predicted theoretically to be half-metal and many experiments also have been carried out to establish this half-metallicity [12,13,14].
Heusler alloys are commonly represented by a generic formula X2YZ [15,16,17], in which X and Y stand for transition metal elements and Z for s-p element. Normally, the Heusler compounds crystallize in a highly ordered cubic structure either in Cu2MnAl-type or Hg2CuTi-type, and there is half metallic behavior found in both types. We should point out here that Hg2CuTi-type full Heusler alloys have been widely studied and a number of this type alloys exhibit half-metallic properties [18,19,20], and also, many of Hg2CuTi alloys obey the well-known Slater–Pauling rule [21,22,23]. More important, some Hg2CuTi-type Ti2-based full Heusler alloys have been predicted to be spin-gapless semiconductors [18,24] or magnetic Weyl semimetal [25]. Thus, Ti2-based Heusler becomes of great interest nowadays.
Several Ti2Ni-based full Heusler alloys have been theoretically studied, such as Feng et al. [26,27] demonstrated Ti2NiAl and Ti2NiIn being half-metal with complete spin polarization around the Fermi level; Wei et al. [19] and Boudali et al. [28] performed a series of studies on the half-metallic, structural, mechanical properties of Ti2NiZ (Z = Al, Ga, In); Wei et al. [29] and Feng et al. [27] made detailed analysis of the electronic and magnetic properties of defects in Ti2NiIn and also examined the stability and thermodynamic properties on Ti2NiIn; Wen et al. concentrated on the mechanical and acoustic properties of Ti2NiZ (Z = Al, Ga, In) Heusler alloys. In this work, we focus on Ti2NiIn compound and carry out a systematic study on its strain condition in terms of the pressure and temperature dependence of its structural, electronic, magnetic and mechanical properties based on first-principles calculation and the quasi-harmonic Debye model. Different from previous studies, we further enlarge the applied static pressure to 50 GPa and elevate the temperature limit to 1500 K and also correlated the different lattice constants with pressure by geometry optimization. Thus, we can reveal the effect of external pressure to better understand the real condition. Besides, we also discuss the tetragonal distortion and its impact on the half-metallic, electronic and magnetic properties of Ti2NiIn.

2. Computational Details

2.1. Crystal Structure and Equilibrium Lattice

The cubic Heusler compounds X2YZ commonly have Cu2MnAl-type structure or Hg2CuTi-type structure. The former one is also known as L21 structure and the latter on as XA structure or inverse structure. In either one, the basic crystal structure is based on four interpenetrating face-centered-cubic (FCC) sublattices defined by Wyckoff coordinates as A (0, 0, 0), B (0.25, 0.25, 0.25), C (0.5, 0.5, 0.5) and D (0.75, 0.75, 0.75). For the currently studied Ti2NiIn alloy, we adopt the inverse structure and the position sites A, B, C and D are occupied by Ti, Ti, Ni and In atoms, accordingly, see the inset crystal structure in Figure 1. We have performed first-principles calculations using the pseudo-potential plane-wave methods based on density functional theory (DFT) [30] as implemented in the CASTEP codes [31]. The exchange-correlation functional scheme is selected as the Perdew–Burke–Ernzerhof (PBE) functional within the generalized gradient approximation (GGA) [32]. The ultrasoft pseudopotential is applied to describe the interaction between ions and electrons. After the convergence test, the following parameters are set: 500 eV plane-wave cutoff energy, 5 × 10−6 eV self-consistent field tolerance and 12 × 12 × 12 k-point mesh.
To determine the equilibrium lattice constant of Ti2NiIn, we first compute the total energy at different lattice constants and the result is shown in Figure 1. By polynomial fitting and total energy minimization, we successfully obtain the equilibrium lattice constant, 6.42 Å, which is in very good agreement with other studies [27,28,29,33,34].

2.2. Electronic and Magnetic Properties

Based on the obtained equilibrium lattice, we can calculate the electronic structure and magnetic properties of Ti2NiIn with PBE-GGA and ultrasoft pseudopotential to describe the exchange-correlation functional and the interaction between ions and electrons. Furthermore, for the application of external pressure, we performed structural optimization with the Broyden-Fletcher-Goldfarb-Shanno (BFGS) minimization [35]. The converge parameters for this structure optimization are set as follows: the energy change per atom is less than 5 × 10−6 eV; the forces on atoms are less than 0.01 eV/Å and all the stress components are less than 0.02 GPa. Figure 2 shows the lattice constants and total energies under different pressure. With pressure increase, the lattice decreases yet the total energy increases. After the structure optimization under different pressure, the electronic and magnetic behaviors at different pressure were calculated accordingly.

2.3. Mechanical Properties

For the mechanical properties of Ti2NiIn, we first study its elastic constants and they are obtained by the stress-strain method [36]. For a cubic structure, there are three independent elastic constants, namely, C11, C12 and C14, in which C11 represents the elasticity in length and the other two characterize the elasticity in shape. In addition, the mechanical stability for cubic structure crystal can be judged by the following generalized Born-Huang elastic stability criteria [37,38]:
C 11 + 2 C 12 > 0 , C 11 - C 12 > 0 , C 44 > 0
With these three elastic constants we can further calculated other mechanical properties by the Voigt-Reuss-Hill (VRH) approximation [39]. The bulk modulus B and the shear modulus G generally describe the resistance to volume and shape variation and can be given by
B = B R + B V 2 , G = G R + G V 2
where BR (BV) and GR (GV) represent the lower (upper) limit for polycrystalline crystal at the Reuss (Voigt) boundary. For a cubic crystal, they have the following relations with the elastic constants [40]:
B R = B V = C 11 + 2 C 12 3 , G V = C 11 - C 12 + 3 C 44 5 , G R = 5 C 44 ( C 11 - C 11 ) 4 C 44 + 3 ( C 11 - C 12 )
Then, the Young’s modulus E and Poisson’s ratio ν can be determined from B and G by the following formula [41]:
E = 9 GB 3 B + G , ν = 3 B - 2 G 2 ( 3 B + G )

2.4. Thermodynamic Properties

In order to understand the specific behavior of Ti2NiIn compound under severe constraints, we further studied its thermodynamic properties and their dependencies on temperature and pressure by the quasi-harmonic Debye model [42,43,44]. The studied temperature range is from 0 to 1500 K and pressure range from 0 to 50 GPa. In the quasi-harmonic Debye model, the non-equilibrium Gibbs free energy is expressed by
G * ( V ; P , T ) = E ( V ) + PV + A vib ( Θ D ( V ) ; T )
where E(V) is the total energy per unit cell of Ti2NiIn, PV represents the constant hydrostatic pressure condition, ΘD(V) corresponds the Debye temperature and Avib stands for the vibrational Helmholtz free energy, which can be expressed as follow using the Debye model of the phonon density:
A vib ( Θ D ; T ) = nk B T 9 8 Θ D T + 1 3 ln ( 1 - e - Θ D / T ) - D ( Θ D / T )
where kB is the Boltzmann constant, n is the number of atoms per formula unit, D(ΘD/T) is the Debye integral defined as
D ( x ) = 3 x 3 0 x y 3 e y - 1 dy
For an isotropic solid, the Debye temperature ΘD can be written as:
Θ D = k B ( 6 π 2 V 1 / 2 n ) 1 / 3 f ( ν ) B S M
where M is the molecular mass per formula unit and BS the static bulk modulus, which can be approximated by the static compressibility:
B S = B static ( V ) = V d 2 E ( V ) dV 2
and ν is the Poisson’s ratio and f(ν) is given as:
f ( ν ) = 3 2 2 3 1 + ν 1 - 2 ν 3 / 2 + 1 3 1 + ν 1 - ν 3 / 2 - 1 1 / 3
As a result, the non-equilibrium Gibbs functions can be minimized with respect to volume V as follow:
G * ( V ; P , T ) V P , T = 0
Then, the thermal equation of state (EOS) can be obtained by solving the above equation and the isothermal bulk modulus BT, the heat capacity CV at constant volume and CP at constant pressure are given by the following equations:
B T ( P , T ) = V 2 G * ( V ; P , T ) V 2 P , T
C V = 3 nk B 4 D ( Θ D / T ) - 3 Θ D / T e Θ D / T - 1
C P = C V ( 1 + α γ T )
where the thermal expansion coefficient α and the Grüneisen constant γ are
α = γ C V B T V , γ = d ln Θ D ( V ) d lnV

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Electronic, Magnetic and Half-Metallic Behaviors

Based on the obtained equilibrium lattice constant at null pressure and the optimized structure at different pressures, the electronic band structure of Ti2NiIn compound has been calculated and displayed in Figure 3. The Fermi energy level is represented by the zero energy in the figure. It can be seen clearly that this material exhibits half-metallic behavior because there is no band gap in the majority spin, but a band gap exists in the minority spin. Through the currently applied pressure from 0 to 50 GPa, there is always a band gap in the minority spin and the Fermi level is kept inside this gap, meaning the half-metallicity of Ti2NiIn compound is maintained even to the high pressure of 50 GPa. A closer look at the band structure, especially for the band gap in the minority spin channel, we found that as the Ti2NiIn is compressed with increased pressure, the valence band maximum (VBM) in the minority spin is continuously shifted downwards while the conduction band minimum (CBM) is almost unchanged, leading to the increase of the band gap in the minority spin, as shown in Figure 4, which is also confirmed by the total density of state in the figure. For the majority spin, there is only a very small variation of the band structure, especially at the G point.
The total magnetic moment (TMM) and the atom-resolved spin magnetic moment (AMM) of atom Ti, Ni and In under pressure from 0 to 50 GPa are calculated and plotted in Figure 5. The magnetic moments of Ni and In atoms are always negative and also very small. With pressure increase, their magnetic moments only show a very tiny increase. Therefore, the total magnetic moment is mainly from Ti atoms from both two sites. The two sites of Ti atoms both have positive magnetic moments: for site I, the AMM of Ti does not change with pressure; whereas, for site II, there is a slight decrease along pressure increase. From the different variation effects of AMMs of all atoms, the TMM is always equal to an integer value of 3 µB through the whole pressure range. This integral behavior of the TMM is a typical characteristic of the Heusler compound. The Ti2NiIn material has 21 valence electrons (Zt) and the total magnetic moment (Mt) obeys the Slater–Pauling rule [19,29], Mt = Zt − 18. All these magnetic behaviors show a good stability again pressure variation to the applied pressure limit of 50 GPa.
During film growth, this tetragonal distortion often occurs and, then, the physical properties of material may vary greatly. Consequently, we further study the effects of tetragonal distortion on the electronic and magnetic properties of the Ti2NiIn compound. By keeping the unit cell volume constantly at the equilibrium condition and varying the ratio of c/a from 0.9 to 1.1, we realize different tetragonal structures as shown in the left panel of Figure 6 and calculate the electronic and magnetic properties of Ti2NiIn accordingly. The results are shown in Figure 6 and Figure 7 for the electronic and magnetic behaviors, respectively.
It can be seen that with the ratio of c/a changing from 1 (no distortion) to either smaller or larger values, the valence band maximum always increases, yet, the conduction band minimum decreases. However, the variation amplitude of the conduction band minimum is larger than that of the valence band maximum, which leads to the band gap decrease at c/a ratio different from 1. Moreover, we found the effect of c/a ration is a little stronger when it is smaller than one. For the magnetic moment of each atom, the effect of c/a ratio is shown in Figure 7 and there are very small changes only for Ti(I) and Ni atoms by the tetragonal distortion. The total magnetic moment keeps the same value of 3 µB, meaning that the magnetic behavior of Ti2NiIn compound shows some resistance to tetragonal distortion.

3.2. Mechanic Properties

The mechanical property of material plays a critical role for its application. For the studied cubic Ti2NiIn compound, three independent elastic constants together with the bulk modulus B, shear modulus G, Young’s modulus E and Pugh’s ratio B/G are calculated as described in Section 2.3 under the pressure range from 0 to 50 GPa. The results are listed in Table 1 and also plotted in Figure 8. The obtained results at low pressure range from 0 to 10 GPa, and match other studies very well [27,28,29,33,34]. From the three elastic constants and bulk modulus, the mechanical stability of Ti2NiIn compound is examined with the generalized Born-Huang elastic stability criteria [37,38], see Equation (1). It is found that through the whole pressure range from 0 to 50 GPa, the Ti2NiIn compound satisfies this criteria and thus is mechanically stable. From Figure 8, one can see that all the three elastic constants Cij show a moderate increase with pressure. But, C11 and C12 have much larger change with pressure than C44. Obviously, the increases of elastic constants and moduli with pressure make the material stronger and more difficult to compress. The Pugh’s ratio can be used to predict whether the material is brittle or ductile and it is equal to 2.29 at null pressure, larger than 1.75, indicating that this compound is ductile. With pressure increase, the Pugh’s ratio shows a upward trend, meaning the Ti2NiIn compound becomes more and more ductile at higher pressure. From Figure 8 it can also be observed that the bulk modulus B, shear modulus G and Young’s modulus E increase monotonically with pressure increase from 0 to 50 GPa. However, the variation of G is smaller than that of B and E.

3.3. Thermodynamic Properties

The thermodynamic properties can provide us much more information about the material’s specific behaviors under severe constraints, such as high temperature or high pressure conditions. Thus, we further investigate the influence of temperature and temperature on the thermodynamic parameters, e.g., thermal expansion coefficient α, heat capacity CV, Grüneisen constant γ and Debye temperature ΘD, by applying the quasi-harmonic Debye model [42,43,44]. The thermodynamic properties are studied in the temperature range from 0 to 1500 K under a series of pressure values from 0 to 50 GPa.
Figure 9 shows the variation of the normalized unit cell volume V/V0 under different pressure and temperature values for Ti2NiIn, where V is the volume at pressure P and temperature T and V0 is the equilibrium volume at null pressure and 0 K. It clearly shows that the relative volume increases with increasing temperature for all the pressure series, see the left panel of Figure 9. This result is apparently expected because commonly material expands at higher temperature. Besides, the volume variation with temperature at lower pressure is stronger than at higher pressure. With pressure increase, the relative volume simply decreases for all different temperature series because material is compressed at higher pressure. Moreover, the volume at higher temperature shows larger variation with pressure than that at lower temperature. Furthermore, we found that the volume is more sensitive to pressure than temperature, i.e., the volume variation with pressure is more important than that of temperature.
The thermal expansion coefficient α has both theoretical and practical significances and also it is essential to predicate the thermodynamic equation of state. The variation of α with temperature and pressure is displayed in Figure 10. It can be seen that the thermal expansion α increases markedly with temperature from 0 to 1500 K; also, the increasing rate is much larger at initial temperature increase from 0 to 300 K. This is because the anharmonic effect of the Debye model at lower temperature is strongly depressed at high temperature. The variation of α with temperature is stronger at lower pressure. From the right panel of Figure 10, we found the α decreases continuously with pressure increase and also the variation trend is stronger at the initial pressure change from 0 to 10 GPa, especially for the higher temperature series. At null pressure and 300 K, the thermal expansion α for the studied Ti2NiIn compound is 4.34 × 10−5 K−1.
Next, we examine the heat capacity CV and CP of Ti2NiIn dependence on temperature and pressure. Commonly, heat capacity is a critical parameter for the material physical properties and it can provide significant information about the lattice vibration and transition of phase. The result is plotted in Figure 11. It is found that the temperature has a very strong effect at the low temperature from 0 to 300 K because of the sharp increase of CV and CP. This is because of the anharmonic approximation of the Debye model at lower temperature. Further increasing temperature, this anharmonic part is suppressed and CV saturates quickly to the Dulong-Petit limit, which indicates that thermal energy excites all the possible phonon mode at higher temperature and is common to all solids. While for CP, it continues to increase slowly with temperature and this different behaviors can be easily understood by Equation 14. Besides, the pressure has reverse impact, i.e., both CV and CP decrease with pressure increase. The changing rate is reduced with temperature increase. At zero pressure and 300 K, the CV and CP for the studied Ti2NiIn compound is equal to 91.3 JMol−1 K−1 and 93.7 JMol−1 K−1.
The Grüneisen constant γ is of great interest because it appears in some important thermodynamic relations. The dependence of γ on temperature and pressure is calculated and plotted in Figure 12. With increasing temperature, Grüneisen constant γ continuously increases and its amplitude of variation from 0 to 1500 K is strongly suppressed by higher pressure. Moreover, the increasing rate of γ with temperature is bigger at higher temperature; though, there is very small change between 0 and 300 K. For a given temperature, γ decreases with pressure increase. The calculated γ of Ti2NiIn compound at zero pressure and 300 K is 2.085.
Finally, we investigate the effect of temperature and pressure on the Debye temperature ΘD and the result is shown in Figure 13. When the temperature of the material is below its Debye temperature, the lattice vibration is mainly excited from acoustic vibration and the quantum mechanical effect plays a critical role in the thermodynamic properties. However, these can be negligible when the temperature is above the Debye temperature. It can be seen in Figure 13, that ΘD smoothly decreases with increasing temperature and the variation trend is larger at lower pressure. Furthermore, the decreasing rate of ΘD with temperature becomes stronger at higher temperature and there is a very small variation at low temperature from 0 to 300 K. However, with pressure increase, ΘD continuously increases. The calculated ΘD of the studied Ti2NiIn compound at zero pressure and 300 K is 403.88 K.

4. Conclusions

In this work, we employ first-principles calculations based on density functional theory and systematically study the structural, electronic, magnetic and mechanical properties of the inverse Heusler compound Ti2NiIn under a series of external pressure. The obtained equilibrium lattice constant and electronic band structure at null pressure are consistent with previous studies. By applying static pressure from 0 to 50 GPa, this material maintains its half-metallicity and also its total magnetic moment is kept the same as 3 µB, which obeys the Slater–Pauling rule. This means the Ti2NiIn is robust against pressure changes. Along the pressure increase, all the elastic constants and moduli monotonically increase. With the generalized elastic stability criteria, Ti2NiIn is mechanically stable through the studied pressure range. The Pugh’s ratio of Ti2NiIn at null pressure is 2.29 and increases with increasing pressure, reflecting its stronger ductility. Furthermore, we examine the thermodynamic properties of this material by applying the quasi-harmonic Debye model and obtain the dependence on temperature and pressure of several parameters including the normalized volume V/V0, thermal expansion coefficient α, heat capacity CV, Grüneisen constant γ and Debye temperature ΘD. It is found that α, γ and CV increase with increasing temperature and decrease with increasing pressure, while an opposite effect of temperature and pressure on ΘD is seen. For different parameters, the amplitude of variation from temperature and pressure show different trends. This theoretical study can provide detailed information and valuable reference for further experimental work.

Author Contributions

T.Y. conceived the work and J.C. performed the calculations; T.Y, and J.C. wrote the paper; X.W. supervised this work; X.W. and J.C. provided valuable comments on the manuscript.

Funding

This research was supported by “Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities” grant number [XDJK2018C078] and “Doctoral Fund Project of Southwest University” grant number [SWU117037].

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. The calculated total energy of Ti2NiIn compound with respect to different lattice constant. Inset is the corresponding crystal structure.
Figure 1. The calculated total energy of Ti2NiIn compound with respect to different lattice constant. Inset is the corresponding crystal structure.
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Figure 2. The calculated lattice constant and total energy of Ti2NiIn compound under different external pressure. 0 GPa refers to the equilibrium condition.
Figure 2. The calculated lattice constant and total energy of Ti2NiIn compound under different external pressure. 0 GPa refers to the equilibrium condition.
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Figure 3. The electronic band structure and total density of states of Ti2NiIn compound around the Fermi energy level (0 eV) under different pressure.
Figure 3. The electronic band structure and total density of states of Ti2NiIn compound around the Fermi energy level (0 eV) under different pressure.
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Figure 4. The conduction band minimum (CBM), valence band maximum (VBM) and band gap in the minority spin channel of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
Figure 4. The conduction band minimum (CBM), valence band maximum (VBM) and band gap in the minority spin channel of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
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Figure 5. Total and atom-resolved magnetic momentum for Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure. Atomic site is referred as the inset crystal structure in Figure 1.
Figure 5. Total and atom-resolved magnetic momentum for Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure. Atomic site is referred as the inset crystal structure in Figure 1.
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Figure 6. The tetragonal structure and the conduction band minimum (CBM), valence band maximum (VBM) and band gap in the minority spin channel of Ti2NiIn compound under tetragonal deformation of different c/a ratio.
Figure 6. The tetragonal structure and the conduction band minimum (CBM), valence band maximum (VBM) and band gap in the minority spin channel of Ti2NiIn compound under tetragonal deformation of different c/a ratio.
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Figure 7. Total and atom-resolved magnetic momentum for Ti2NiIn compound under tetragonal deformation of different c/a ratio. Atomic site is referred as the inset crystal structure in Figure 1.
Figure 7. Total and atom-resolved magnetic momentum for Ti2NiIn compound under tetragonal deformation of different c/a ratio. Atomic site is referred as the inset crystal structure in Figure 1.
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Figure 8. The elastic constants Cij, bulk modulus B, shear modulus G and Young’s modulus E of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
Figure 8. The elastic constants Cij, bulk modulus B, shear modulus G and Young’s modulus E of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
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Figure 9. The normalized volume V/V0 variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
Figure 9. The normalized volume V/V0 variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
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Figure 10. The thermal expansion coefficient α variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
Figure 10. The thermal expansion coefficient α variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
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Figure 11. The variation of heat capacity CV and CP with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
Figure 11. The variation of heat capacity CV and CP with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
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Figure 12. The Grüneisen constant γ variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
Figure 12. The Grüneisen constant γ variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
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Figure 13. The Debye temperature D variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
Figure 13. The Debye temperature D variation with temperature (left) and pressure (right) for Ti2NiIn.
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Table 1. The elastic constants Cij, bulk modulus B, shear modulus G, Young’s modulus E and Pugh’s ratio B/G of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
Table 1. The elastic constants Cij, bulk modulus B, shear modulus G, Young’s modulus E and Pugh’s ratio B/G of Ti2NiIn compound under different pressure.
PC11C12C44BGEB/G
(GPa)(GPa)(GPa)(GPa)(GPa)(GPa)(GPa)
0145.06101.6688.24116.1350.63132.612.29
10200.41143.84108.47162.7063.61168.832.56
20246.02177.93126.21200.6374.97199.992.68
30286.15207.09142.41233.4485.52228.642.73
40330.37241.47157.26271.1095.09255.402.85
50372.05273.39163.73306.28101.45274.093.02

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Yang, T.; Cao, J.; Wang, X. Structural, Electronic, Magnetic, Mechanic and Thermodynamic Properties of the Inverse Heusler Alloy Ti2NiIn Under Pressure. Crystals 2018, 8, 429. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst8110429

AMA Style

Yang T, Cao J, Wang X. Structural, Electronic, Magnetic, Mechanic and Thermodynamic Properties of the Inverse Heusler Alloy Ti2NiIn Under Pressure. Crystals. 2018; 8(11):429. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst8110429

Chicago/Turabian Style

Yang, Tie, Jieting Cao, and Xiaotian Wang. 2018. "Structural, Electronic, Magnetic, Mechanic and Thermodynamic Properties of the Inverse Heusler Alloy Ti2NiIn Under Pressure" Crystals 8, no. 11: 429. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst8110429

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