4.6 Article

Bimodal phase percolation model for the structure of Ge-Se glasses and the existence of the intermediate phase

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 80, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.80.214114

Keywords

amorphous semiconductors; cooling; enthalpy; Ge-Si alloys; glass structure; glass transition; heating; high-temperature effects; nuclear magnetic resonance; percolation; Raman spectra; twinning

Funding

  1. NSF-DMR [0806333]
  2. CNRS International Associated Laboratory, Materials Optics
  3. National Nuclear Security administration Carnegie/DOE Alliance Center (NNSA CDAC)
  4. Division Of Materials Research
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0806333] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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A detailed nuclear magnetic resonance and Raman study of Ge(x)Se(1-x) glasses indicate that the glass structure is composed of intertwined microdomains of GeSe(2) and Se(n). Static nuclear magnetic resonance spectra of glasses ranging from 0 < x < 1/3 reveal the absence of Ge-Se-Se fragments in the structure. High temperature nuclear magnetic resonance showing considerable line narrowing confirms this observation. More importantly, the fraction of Se-Se-Se obtained by integration of nuclear magnetic resonance lines matches closely the percentage predicted for a bimodal phase model and is not consistent with the existence of Ge-Se-Se fragments. Raman spectra collected on the same glass also confirm the existence of GeSe(2) domains up to high selenium concentrations. The mobility of the Se(n) phase observed at high temperature while the GeSe(2) phase remains rigid is consistent with their respective underconstrained and overconstrained structural nature. The proposed bimodal phase percolation model is consistent with the original Phillips and Thorpe theory however it is clearly at odds with the intermediate phase model which predicts large amounts of Ge-Se-Se fragments in the structure. A calorimetric study performed over a wide range of cooling/heating rates shows a narrow composition dependence centered at << r >>=2.4 in contrast with the wide reversibility window observed by Modulated Differential Scanning Calorimetry. This suggests that the observation of the reversibility window associated with the intermediate phase in Ge-Se glasses could be an experimental artifact resulting from the use of a single modulation frequency.

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