Abstract

In pressure-induced structural transitions, the term reversible refers to the recovery of the virgin structure in a material upon complete decompression. Pressure-induced amorphous-to-crystalline transitions have been claimed to be reversible, but evidence that amorphous material recovers its virgin amorphous structure upon complete depressurization has been lacking. In amorphous As2Se3 (a-As2Se3) chalcogenide, however, we report a novel amorphous-to-crystalline transition that provides compelling experimental evidence that upon complete decompression, the recovered amorphous phase is structurally the same as that of the virgin (as-cast) amorphous phase. Combining the experimental results with ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, we elucidate that the amorphization is mediated by a surplus of total free energy in the high-pressure face-centered cubic phase as compared to the virgin amorphous phase and that the structural recovery to the virgin amorphous phase is a consequence of an enhancement in covalent bonding character over interlayer forces upon complete decompression. Furthermore, we observed a two-dimensional to three-dimensional network transition under compression and its reversibility upon decompression. © 2016 American Physical Society.

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