• Yonghui Zheng
  • Wenxiong Song
  • Zhitang Song
  • Yuanyuan Zhang
  • Tianjiao Xin
  • Cheng Liu
  • Yuan Xue
  • Sannian Song
  • Bo Liu
  • Xiaoling Lin
  • Vladimir G. Kuznetsov
  • Ilya I. Tupitsyn
  • Alexander V. Kolobov
  • Yan Cheng
The disorder-to-order (crystallization) process in phase-change materials
determines the speed and storage polymorphism of phase-change memory
devices. Only by clarifying the fine-structure variation can the devices be
insightfully designed, and encode and store information. As essential
phase-change parent materials, the crystallized Sb–Te binary system is
generally considered to have the cationic/anionic site occupied by Sb/Te
atoms. Here, direct atomic identification and simulation demonstrate that the
ultrafast crystallization speed of Sb–Te materials is due to the random nature
of lattice site occupation by different classes of atoms with the resulting
octahedral motifs having high similarity to the amorphous state. It is further
proved that after atomic ordering with disordered chemical occupation,
chemical ordering takes place, which results in different storage states with
different resistance values. These new insights into the complicated route
from disorder to order will play an essential role in designing neuromorphic
devices with varying polymorphisms.
Translated title of the contributionСложный путь от беспорядка к порядку в бинарных материалах с фазовым переходом сурьма-теллур
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2301021
Number of pages9
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume11
Issue number9
Early online date22 Dec 2023
DOIs
StatePublished - 6 Mar 2024

    Research areas

  • antimony–tellurium binary materials, atomic structure, phase transition mechanism, phase-change materials, spherical aberration-corrected transmission electron microscope

ID: 115217822