Unveiling the Boson Peaks in Amorphous Phase-Change Materials
Jens Moesgaard, Tomoki Fujita, and Shuai Wei

TL;DR
This study reveals the presence of Boson peaks in amorphous phase-change materials, linking vibrational modes to alloy composition and glass transition properties, which could inform future material design.
Contribution
It provides the first evidence of Boson peaks in PCMs and correlates their characteristics with composition, glass transition, and bonding types, expanding understanding of amorphous solids.
Findings
Boson peaks are observed in heat capacity below 10 K in all studied PCMs.
Characteristic parameters of Boson peaks correlate with Sb-content and enthalpy relaxation.
Different bonding types influence the relationship between Boson peaks and material properties.
Abstract
The Boson peak is a universal phenomenon in amorphous solids. It can be observed as an anomalous contribution to the low-temperature heat capacity over the Debye model. Amorphous phase-change materials (PCMs) such as Ge-Sb-Te are a family of poor glass formers with fast crystallization kinetics, being of interest for phase-change memory applications. So far, whether Boson peaks exist in PCMs is unknown and, if they do, their relevance to PCM properties is unclear. Here, we investigate the thermodynamic properties of the pseudo-binary compositions on the tie-line between Ge15Te85 and Ge15Sb85 from a few Kelvins to the liquidus temperatures. Our results demonstrate the evidence of the pronounced Boson peaks in heat capacity below 10 K in the amorphous phase of all compositions. By fitting the data using the Debye model combined with the Einstein model, we can extract the characteristic…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsPhase-change materials and chalcogenides · Glass properties and applications · Solid-state spectroscopy and crystallography
