Abstract

We demonstrate that pressure-induced amorphization in Ge-Sb-Te alloys across the ferroelectric-paraelectric transition can be represented as a mixture of coherently distorted rhombohedral Ge8Sb2Te11 and randomly distorted cubic Ge4Sb2Te7 and high-temperature Ge8Sb2Te11 phases. While coherent distortion in Ge8Sb2Te11 does not prevent the crystalline state from collapsing into its amorphous counterpart in a similar manner to pure GeTe, the pressure-amorphized Ge8Sb2Te11 phase begins to revert to the crystalline cubic phase at ∼9 GPa in contrast to Ge4Sb2Te7, which remains amorphous under ambient conditions when gradually decompressed from 40 GPa. Moreover, experimentally, it was observed that pressure-induced amorphization in Ge8Sb2Te11 is a temperature-dependent process. Ge8Sb2Te11 transforms into the amorphous phase at ∼27.5 and 25.2 GPa at room temperature and 408 K, respectively, and completely amorphizes at 32 GPa at 408 K, while some crystalline texture could be seen until 38 GPa (the last measurement point) at room temperature. To understand the origins of the temperature dependence of the pressure-induced amorphization process, density functional theory calculations were performed for compositions along the (GeTe)x - (Sb2Te3)1-x tie line under large hydrostatic pressures. The calculated results agreed well with the experimental data.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call