Aging mechanisms in amorphous phase-change materials

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Abstract

Aging is a ubiquitous phenomenon in glasses. In the case of phase-change materials, it leads to a drift in the electrical resistance, which hinders the development of ultrahigh density storage devices. Here we elucidate the aging process in amorphous GeTe, a prototypical phase-change material, by advanced numerical simulations, photothermal deflection spectroscopy and impedance spectroscopy experiments. We show that aging is accompanied by a progressive change of the local chemical order towards the crystalline one. Yet, the glass evolves towards a covalent amorphous network with increasing Peierls distortion, whose structural and electronic properties drift away from those of the resonantly bonded crystal. This behaviour sets phase-change materials apart from conventional glass-forming systems, which display the same local structure and bonding in both phases.

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Raty, J. Y., Zhang, W., Luckas, J., Chen, C., Mazzarello, R., Bichara, C., & Wuttig, M. (2015). Aging mechanisms in amorphous phase-change materials. Nature Communications, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8467

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