Abstract
Sb2Te3 is an endpoint of the GeTe-Sb2Te3 quasi-binary tie-line that represents phase-change alloys widely used in optical and non-volatile phase-change memory devices. In the crystalline form it is also a prototypical topological insulator with a layered structure where covalently bonded quintuple layers are held together by weak van der Waals forces. One of the ways to fabricate a crystalline phase is solid-state crystallization of an amorphous film, whereby the three-dimensional (3D) structure relaxes to the two-dimensional (2D) crystalline phase. The mechanism of the 3D-2D transformation remains unclear. In this work, we performed a study of relaxation processes in thin Sb2Te3 films in both amorphous and crystalline phases. We found that both phases possess two kinds of relaxators (type I and type II), where the type I fragments are identical in the two phases, while the relaxation of type II fragments are shifted to lower temperature in the amorphous phases. The activation energies of the associated relaxation processes and the values of the Havriliak–Negami parameters were determined. The differences between the relaxation processes in the two phases are discussed. The obtained result will contribute to better understanding of the 3D-2D transformation during the crystallization of van der Waals solids.
Highlights
Antimony telluride, Sb2Te3, is at the same time a narrow-gap semiconductor and a topological insulator
Sb2Te3 belongs to the class of layered van der Waals solids, where covalently bonded quintuple layers with the Te-Sb-Te-Sb-Te stacking sequence are held together by weak van der Waals interactions
Such a study would foster a significant interest because amorphous film possesses a three-dimensional (3D) structure, while the dimensionality is changed to 2D in the crystalline phase
Summary
Sb2Te3, is at the same time a narrow-gap semiconductor and a topological insulator. The dielectric properties of thermally evaporated Sb2Te3 thin films have been investigated in [13, 14] but to date there have been no reports on comparative studies of the amorphous and crystalline phases.
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More From: Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics
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