4.8 Article

Rules of hierarchical melt and coordinate bond to design crystallization in doped phase change materials

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26696-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFB0701703, 2017YFA0206101, 2017YFA0206104, 2018YFB0407500, SQ2017YFGX020134]
  2. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB44010200]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61904189, 62174168, 61874129, 61874178]
  4. Science and Technology Council of Shanghai [17DZ2291300, 18DZ2272800]
  5. Shanghai Pujiang Program [21PJ1415300]

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In this study, hierarchical melt and coordinate bond strategies are proposed to stabilize a medium-range crystal-like region and an amorphous region, respectively, in order to address the conflicting performances of writing speed and data retention in phase-change memory.
While alloy design has practically shown an efficient strategy to mediate two seemingly conflicted performances of writing speed and data retention in phase-change memory, the detailed kinetic pathway of alloy-tuned crystallization is still unclear. Here, we propose hierarchical melt and coordinate bond strategies to solve them, where the former stabilizes a medium-range crystal-like region and the latter provides a rule to stabilize amorphous. The Er0.52Sb2Te3 compound we designed achieves writing speed of 3.2 ns and ten-year data retention of 161 degrees C. We provide a direct atomic-level evidence that two neighbor Er atoms stabilize a medium-range crystal-like region, acting as a precursor to accelerate crystallization; meanwhile, the stabilized amorphous originates from the formation of coordinate bonds by sharing lone-pair electrons of chalcogenide atoms with the empty 5d orbitals of Er atoms. The two rules pave the way for the development of storage-class memory with comprehensive performance to achieve next technological node. In phase-change memory, writing speed and data retention are two seemingly conflicting performances. Here the authors report hierarchical melt and coordinate bond strategies to stabilize a medium-range crystal-like region and amorphous region, respectively.

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