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Title: Nature of metastable amorphous-to-crystalline reversible phase transformations in GaSb

Journal Article · · Journal of Chemical Physics
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4818805· OSTI ID:22220463
 [1]; ;  [2];  [3]
  1. Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California 20015 (United States)
  2. Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of California, Davis, California 95616 (United States)
  3. IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York 10598 (United States)

The structural, thermodynamic, and kinetic aspects of the transformations between the metastable amorphous and crystalline phases of GaSb are investigated as a function of pressure at ambient temperature using synchrotron x-ray diffraction experiments in a diamond anvil cell. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that the pressure induced crystallization of amorphous GaSb into the β-Sn crystal structure near ∼5 GPa is possibly a manifestation of an underlying polyamorphic phase transition between a semiconducting, low density and a metallic, high density amorphous (LDA and HDA, respectively) phases. In this scenario, the large differences in the thermal crystallization kinetics between amorphous GaSb deposited in thin film form by sputtering and that prepared by laser melt quenching may be related to the relative location of the glass transition temperature of the latter in the pressure-temperature (P-T) space with respect to the location of the critical point that terminate the LDA ↔ HDA transition. The amorphous →β-Sn phase transition is found to be hysteretically reversible as the β-Sn phase undergoes decompressive amorphization near ∼2 GPa due to the lattice instabilities that give rise to density fluctuations in the crystal upon decompression.

OSTI ID:
22220463
Journal Information:
Journal of Chemical Physics, Vol. 139, Issue 8; Other Information: (c) 2013 AIP Publishing LLC; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); ISSN 0021-9606
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English