Defectmediated
Defect-mediated refers to processes in materials and systems where defects play a crucial role in enabling or accelerating mechanisms that would be slow or unfavorable in a defect-free structure. Common defects include vacancies, interstitials, substitutions, dislocations, grain boundaries, and surfaces. The term is used across condensed matter physics, materials science, and catalysis to emphasize the influence of non-ideal atomic arrangements on behavior such as diffusion, phase changes, and chemical reactions.
In diffusion and transport, defect-mediated mechanisms are central. Point defects like vacancies and interstitials provide the
Defect-mediated processes also govern phase transformations and recrystallization. Defects can lower nucleation barriers by providing favorable
Electronic and optical properties are similarly defect-driven. Defects introduce energy levels in band gaps, acting as
Study of defect-mediated phenomena combines experiment and computation, including diffusion measurements, microscopy, spectroscopy, and atomistic simulations,