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Element-resolved atomic structure imaging of rocksalt Ge2Sb2Te5 phase-change material
Author(s) -
Bin Zhang,
Wei Zhang,
Zhenju Shen,
Yongjin Chen,
Jixue Li,
Shengbai Zhang,
Ze Zhang,
Matthias Wuttig,
Riccardo Mazzarello,
E. Ma,
Xiaodong Han
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
applied physics letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.182
H-Index - 442
eISSN - 1077-3118
pISSN - 0003-6951
DOI - 10.1063/1.4949011
Subject(s) - amorphous solid , anderson localization , condensed matter physics , vacancy defect , materials science , annealing (glass) , phase change memory , fermi level , electron , electron localization function , density functional theory , crystallization , chemical physics , nanotechnology , chemistry , physics , crystallography , computational chemistry , organic chemistry , layer (electronics) , quantum mechanics , composite material
Disorder-induced electron localization and metal-insulator transitions (MITs) have been a very active research field starting from the seminal paper by Anderson half a century ago. However, pure Anderson insulators are very difficult to identify due to ubiquitous electron-correlation effects. Recently, an MIT has been observed in electrical transport measurements on the crystalline state of phase-change GeSbTe compounds, which appears to be exclusively disorder driven. Subsequent density functional theory simulations have identified vacancy disorder to localize electrons at the Fermi level. Here, we report a direct atomic scale chemical identification experiment on the rocksalt structure obtained upon crystallization of amorphousGe2Sb2Te5. Our results confirm the two-sublattice structure resolving the distribution of chemical species and demonstrate the existence of atomic disorder on the Ge/Sb/vacancy sublattice. Moreover, we identify a gradual vacancy ordering process upon further annealing. These findings not only provide a structural underpinning of the observed Anderson localization but also have implications for the development of novel multi-level data storage within the crystalline phases.

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