Colloidal Phase-Change Materials: Synthesis of Monodisperse GeTe Nanoparticles and Quantification of Their Size-Dependent Crystallization
Author(s) -
Olesya Yarema,
Aleksandr Perevedentsev,
Vladimir Ovuka,
Paul Baade,
Sebastian Volk,
Vanessa Wood,
Maksym Yarema
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
chemistry of materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.741
H-Index - 375
eISSN - 1520-5002
pISSN - 0897-4756
DOI - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b02702
Subject(s) - dispersity , crystallization , materials science , colloid , nanoparticle , phase (matter) , phase change , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , colloidal particle , chemistry , thermodynamics , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , physics , engineering
Phase-change memory materials refer to a class of materials that can exist in amorphous and crystalline phases with distinctly different electrical or optical properties, as well as exhibit outstanding crystallization kinetics and optimal phase transition temperatures. This paper focuses on the potential of colloids as phase-change memory materials. We report a novel synthesis for amorphous GeTe nanoparticles based on an amide-promoted approach that enables accurate size control of GeTe nanoparticles between 4 and 9 nm, narrow size distributions down to 9-10%, and synthesis upscaling to reach multigram chemical yields per batch. We then quantify the crystallization phase transition for GeTe nanoparticles, employing high-temperature X-ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and transmission electron microscopy. We show that GeTe nanoparticles crystallize at higher temperatures than the bulk GeTe material and that crystallization temperature increases with decreasing size. We can explain this size-dependence using the entropy of crystallization model and classical nucleation theory. The size-dependences quantified here highlight possible benefits of nanoparticles for phase-change memory applications.
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