Phase Transitions in Germanium Telluride Nanoparticle Phase-Change Materials Studied by Time-Resolved X-Ray Diffraction
Ann-Katrin U. Michel, Felix Donat, Aurelia Siegfried, Olesya Yarema,, Hanbing Fang, Maksym Yarema, Vanessa Wood, Christoph R. M\"uller, and David, J. Norris

TL;DR
This study investigates size-dependent phase transitions in colloidal GeTe nanoparticles using time-resolved X-ray diffraction, revealing shifted transition temperatures but preserved phase behavior, highlighting their potential for photonic applications.
Contribution
It demonstrates that colloidal GeTe nanoparticles exhibit similar phase transitions as bulk GeTe, with size-dependent temperature shifts, enabling flexible fabrication for photonics.
Findings
Amorphous-to-α transition occurs between 210°C and 240°C.
α-to-β transition occurs between 370°C and 420°C.
Transition temperatures are shifted compared to bulk GeTe.
Abstract
Germanium telluride (GeTe), a phase-change material, is known to exhibit four different structural phases: three at room temperature (one amorphous and two crystalline, and ) and one at high temperature (crystalline ). Because transitions between the amorphous and crystalline phases lead to significant changes in material properties (e.g., refractive index and resistivity), GeTe has been investigated as a phase-change material for photonics, thermoelectrics, ferroelectrics, and spintronics. Consequently, the temperature-dependent phase transitions in GeTe have been studied for bulk and thin-film GeTe, both fabricated by sputtering. Colloidal synthesis of nanoparticles offers a more flexible fabrication approach for amorphous and crystalline GeTe. These nanoparticles are known to exhibit size-dependent properties, such as an increased crystallization temperature…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
