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      Structures of stable and metastable Ge2Sb2Te5, an intermetallic compound in GeTe-Sb2Te3 pseudobinary systems.

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          Abstract

          The most widely used memory materials for rewritable phase-change optical disks are the GeTe-Sb2Te3 pseudobinary compounds. Among these compounds, Ge2Sb2Te5 crystallizes into a cubic close-packed structure with a six-layer period (metastable phase) in the non-thermal equilibrium state, and a trigonal structure with a nine-layer period (stable phase) in the thermal equilibrium state. The structure of the stable phase has Ge/Sb layers in which Ge and Sb are randomly occupied, as does the structure of the metastable phase, while the conventionally estimated structure had separate layers of Ge and Te. The metastable and stable phases are very similar in that Te and Ge/Sb layers stack alternately to form the crystal. The major differences between these phases are: (i) the stable phase has pairs of adjacent Te layers that are not seen in the metastable phase and (ii) only the metastable phase contains vacancies of ca 20 at. % in the Ge/Sb layers.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Acta Crystallogr., B
          Acta crystallographica. Section B, Structural science
          0108-7681
          0108-7681
          Dec 2004
          : 60
          : Pt 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Characterization Technology Group, Matsushita Technoresearch, Inc., 3-1-1 Yagumo-Nakamachi, Moriguchi, Osaka 570-8501, Japan. matsunaga.toshiyuki@jp.panasonic.com
          Article
          S0108768104022906
          10.1107/S0108768104022906
          15534378
          87fe94e9-ff4b-4c46-9a29-cf7a93426662
          History

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