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    Confined crystals of the smallest phase-change material
    (Washington, DC : American Chemical Society, 2013) Giusca, C.E.; Stolojan, V.; Sloan, J.; Börrnert, F.; Shiozawa, H.; Sader, K.; Rümmeli, M.H.; Büchner, B.; Silva, S.R.P.
    The demand for high-density memory in tandem with limitations imposed by the minimum feature size of current storage devices has created a need for new materials that can store information in smaller volumes than currently possible. Successfully employed in commercial optical data storage products, phase-change materials, that can reversibly and rapidly change from an amorphous phase to a crystalline phase when subject to heating or cooling have been identified for the development of the next generation electronic memories. There are limitations to the miniaturization of these devices due to current synthesis and theoretical considerations that place a lower limit of 2 nm on the minimum bit size, below which the material does not transform in the structural phase. We show here that by using carbon nanotubes of less than 2 nm diameter as templates phase-change nanowires confined to their smallest conceivable scale are obtained. Contrary to previous experimental evidence and theoretical expectations, the nanowires are found to crystallize at this scale and display amorphous-to-crystalline phase changes, fulfilling an important prerequisite of a memory element. We show evidence for the smallest phase-change material, extending thus the size limit to explore phase-change memory devices at extreme scales.
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    Conversion of p–n conduction type by spinodal decomposition in Zn-Sb-Bi phase-change alloys
    ([London] : Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature Tokyo, 2020) Wang, Guoxiang; Shi, Haizhou; Lotnyk, Andriy; Shi, Daotian; Wang, Rongping
    Phase-change films with multiple resistance levels are promising for increasing the storage density in phase-change memory technology. Diffusion-dominated Zn2Sb3 films undergo transitions across three states, from high through intermediate to low resistance, upon annealing. The properties of the Zn2Sb3 material can be further optimized by doping with Bi. Based on scanning transmission electron microscopy combined with electrical transport measurements, at a particular Bi concentration, the conduction of Zn-Sb-Bi compounds changes from p- to n-type, originating from spinodal decomposition. Simultaneously, the change in the temperature coefficient of resistivity shows a metal-to-insulator transition. Further analysis of microstructure characteristics reveals that the distribution of the Bi-Sb phase may be the origin of the driving force for the p–n conduction and metal-to-insulator transitions and therefore may provide us with another way to improve multilevel data storage. Moreover, the Bi doping promotes the thermoelectric properties of the studied alloys, leading to higher values of the power factor compared to known reported structures. The present study sheds valuable light on the spinodal decomposition process caused by Bi doping, which can also occur in a wide variety of chalcogenide-based phase-change materials. In addition, the study provides a new strategy for realizing novel p–n heterostructures for multilevel data storage and thermoelectric applications.