TY - JOUR
T1 - Initial Atomic Motion Immediately Following Femtosecond-Laser Excitation in Phase-Change Materials
AU - Matsubara, E.
AU - Okada, S.
AU - Ichitsubo, T.
AU - Kawaguchi, T.
AU - Hirata, A.
AU - Guan, P. F.
AU - Tokuda, K.
AU - Tanimura, K.
AU - Matsunaga, T.
AU - Chen, M. W.
AU - Yamada, N.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Physical Society.
PY - 2016/9/21
Y1 - 2016/9/21
N2 - Despite the fact that phase-change materials are widely used for data storage, no consensus exists on the unique mechanism of their ultrafast phase change and its accompanied large and rapid optical change. By using the pump-probe observation method combining a femtosecond optical laser and an x-ray free-electron laser, we substantiate experimentally that, in both GeTe and Ge2Sb2Te5 crystals, rattling motion of mainly Ge atoms takes place with keeping the off-center position just after femtosecond-optical-laser irradiation, which eventually leads to a higher symmetry or disordered state. This very initial rattling motion in the undistorted lattice can be related to instantaneous optical change due to the loss of resonant bonding that characterizes GeTe-based phase change materials. Based on the amorphous structure derived by first-principles molecular dynamics simulation, we infer a plausible ultrafast amorphization mechanism via nonmelting.
AB - Despite the fact that phase-change materials are widely used for data storage, no consensus exists on the unique mechanism of their ultrafast phase change and its accompanied large and rapid optical change. By using the pump-probe observation method combining a femtosecond optical laser and an x-ray free-electron laser, we substantiate experimentally that, in both GeTe and Ge2Sb2Te5 crystals, rattling motion of mainly Ge atoms takes place with keeping the off-center position just after femtosecond-optical-laser irradiation, which eventually leads to a higher symmetry or disordered state. This very initial rattling motion in the undistorted lattice can be related to instantaneous optical change due to the loss of resonant bonding that characterizes GeTe-based phase change materials. Based on the amorphous structure derived by first-principles molecular dynamics simulation, we infer a plausible ultrafast amorphization mechanism via nonmelting.
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U2 - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.135501
DO - 10.1103/PhysRevLett.117.135501
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84990229135
SN - 0031-9007
VL - 117
JO - Physical Review Letters
JF - Physical Review Letters
IS - 13
M1 - 135501
ER -