The origin of hexagonal phase and its evolution process in Ge2Sb2Te5 alloy

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Abstract

Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST) is the most important material for phase change random access memory (PCRAM) applications, while the formation of hexagonal (h-) phase results in low switching speed, large energy consumption, and worse endurance performance. Uncovering the formation mechanism of h-phase is beneficial for the further improvement of GST-based PCRAM devices. In this work, through advanced spherical aberration corrected transmission electron microscopy and transmission electron back-scattered diffraction technique, the mechanism of h-phase microstructure evolution is clearly clarified. We find that the vacancy ordering is more likely to appear around the grain boundary in a face-centered-cubic (f-) phase grain, which is the starting point for the generation of h-phase. More specifically, all the atoms in f-phase undergo a gradual shift into h-lattice positions to complete the f-to-h structural transition. By introducing an elemental dopant, for instance, carbon (C), the aggregation of C clusters prefers to distribute in the grain boundary area, which is the essential reason for postponing the generation and expansion of h-phase and greatly improving the thermal stability of C-GST material. In short, clarification of the origin of h-structure incubated from f-phase guides the optimization strategy of GST-based PCRAM devices.

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Liu, C., Tang, Q., Zheng, Y., Zhang, B., Zhao, J., Song, W., … Song, Z. (2022). The origin of hexagonal phase and its evolution process in Ge2Sb2Te5 alloy. APL Materials, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0079370

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