Defects in quasicrystals, revisited I-flips, approximants, phason defects
Abstract
The recent discovery of metadislocations in some periodic complex metallic alloys and of their 'phason' defects has given a new impetus to the study of QC approximant defects. In this paper we emphasize: 1- that approximants differ from a QC by a suitable density of 'flips' only, one per unit cell in the case of Fibonacci approximants; these flips are not topological defects, 2- a flip can split into two 'phason' defects of opposite signs, thus the approximant defects can be studied in a first step as defects of the parent QC. In a companion paper this analysis of QC defects is extended to dislocations; the difference between perfect and imperfect dislocations is emphasized. Imperfect dislocations are the phason defects alluded to above.
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