Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7900054 | Journal of Non-Crystalline Solids | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Crystallization under isothermal condition of supercooled liquid and amorphous silicene (a-silicene) models has been studied via molecular dynamics (MD) simulation with Stillinger-Weber (SW) interaction potential. Supercooled liquid and a-silicene models containing 104 atoms are obtained via the rapid solidification process from the melt. At each given temperature below and above Tg, models are annealed from 5â¯ns up to 8â¯ns in order to investigate aging effect on two-dimensional structural arrangement of disordered Si-atoms. Time dependence of thermodynamic and structural quantities is analyzed including potential energy, radial distribution function (RDF), coordination number, buckling degree, ring and bond-angle distribution. We find that 2D-crystallization of supercooled liquid and a-silicene exhibits a first-order behavior. Time-temperature-transformation (TTT) diagram exhibits a commonly nose-shape by analyzing a wide temperature range from supercooled liquid to amorphous state. High critical cooling rates of a-silicene are found indicating low glass-formation ability of the system. Thermodynamic properties of crystallization of silicenes attained after-aging are studied in details and we clarify a novel scenario of crystallization. A homogenous tendency of natural quenched-in nucleation atoms aggregate into larger clusters in 2D Si supercooled liquid sheet. Consequently, a polycrystalline layer of silicene is developed with decent low-numbered chain defects as grain boundary. In contrast, crystallization of a-silicene shows a partial crystallization behavior: Crystal clusters are found to exhibit a heterogeneous growth in models obtained below Tg. Crystal formed from a-silicene is a quasi-equilibrium state with a large number of defects still existed in models after a long relaxing time.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Nguyen Truong Long, Huynh Anh Huy, Truong Quoc Tuan, Ong Kim Le, Vo Van Hoang, Nguyen Hoang Giang,