Login / Signup

Tuning the Crystallization Mechanism by Composition Vacancy in Phase Change Materials.

Wen-Xiong SongQiongyan TangJin ZhaoMuriel VeronXilin ZhouYonghui ZhengDaolin CaiYan ChengTianjiao XinZhi-Pan LiuZhitang Song
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2024)
Interface-influenced crystallization is crucial to understanding the nucleation- and growth-dominated crystallization mechanisms in phase-change materials (PCMs), but little is known. Here, we find that composition vacancy can reduce the interface energy by decreasing the coordinate number (CN) at the interface. Compared to growth-dominated GeTe, nucleation-dominated Ge 2 Sb 2 Te 5 (GST) exhibits composition vacancies in the (111) interface to saturate or stabilize the Te-terminated plane. Together, the experimental and computational results provide evidence that GST prefers (111) with reduced CN. Furthermore, the (8 - n ) bonding rule, rather than CN6, in the nuclei of both GeTe and GST results in lower interface energy, allowing crystallization to be observed at the simulation time in general PCMs. In comparison to GeTe, the reduced CN in the GST nuclei further decreases the interface energy, promoting faster nucleation. Our findings provide an approach to designing ultrafast phase-change memory through vacancy-stabilized interfaces.
Keyphrases
  • lymph node metastasis
  • squamous cell carcinoma