1969
DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.22.999
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Density of "Amorphous" Ge

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Cited by 54 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…2 The transformation on unloading of Ge-II to a-Ge, which at ambient pressure is close in density to Ge-I, 30 would then account for the elbowing. The pinning mechanism described for the smaller pop-ins is insufficient to account for its magnitude.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2 The transformation on unloading of Ge-II to a-Ge, which at ambient pressure is close in density to Ge-I, 30 would then account for the elbowing. The pinning mechanism described for the smaller pop-ins is insufficient to account for its magnitude.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The average mass density of all films is about (4.3 ± 0.2) g/cm 3 . This value is considerably smaller than that of crystalline Ge (5.36 g/cm 3 [13]) but lies well within the large range of reported mass density values of sputtered or evaporated Ge films, i.e., between 3.15 g/cm 3 up to the value of crystalline Ge [13][14][15][16][17][18][19]. There seems to be almost no systematic relation between the mass densities of our Ge films and the process parameters, apart from slightly higher values for the Ge films grown by sputtering with Xe (average density 4.35 g/cm 3 ) than for sputtering with Ar (average density 4.26 g/cm 3 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…NP melting was considered a prerequisite for the shape transformation and thus a NP size threshold, above which the NPs remained solid and spherical, was defined. As noted in the previous sections, molten Ge is of greater density than solid Ge [20,21], yielding a volume contraction upon melting. Schmidt et al suggested the latter induces tensile stress in the molten NP, which is partially relieved when the molten NP/ molten SiO 2 ion track interface moves axially inwards towards the molten NP center.…”
Section: Ge Nanoparticle Modification In Amorphous Siomentioning
confidence: 92%
“…At about 100 ps, molten material in the ion track starts to cool radially inward and undergoes the HDL-to-LDA phase transformation. Given the LDA phase has a lower density [20,21], the material seeks to expand. Expansion inwards by pressing material into the voids is more favorable compared to expansion outwards into the surrounding LDA material (Fig.…”
Section: Ion Track Formation In Amorphous Gementioning
confidence: 99%