Abstract

Controlled growth of semiconductor nanowires with atomic precision offers the potential to tune the material properties for integration into scalable functional devices. Despite significant progress in understanding the nanowire growth mechanism, definitive control over atomic positions of its constituents, structure, and morphology via self-assembly remains challenging. Here, we demonstrate an exquisite control over synthesis of cation-ordered nanoscale superstructures in Ge-Sb-Te nanowires with the ability to deterministically vary the nanowire growth direction, crystal facets, and periodicity of cation ordering by tuning the relative precursor flux during synthesis. Furthermore, the role of anisotropy on material properties in cation-ordered nanowire superstructures is illustrated by fabricating phase-change memory (PCM) devices, which show significantly different growth direction dependent amorphization current density. This level of control in synthesizing chemically ordered nanoscale superstructures holds potential to precisely modulate fundamental material properties such as the electronic and thermal transport, which may have implications for PCM, thermoelectrics, and other nanoelectronic devices.

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