The detailed analysis of the structural variations of three GeO2 and
SiO2 polymorphs (α-quartz, α-cristobalite, and rutile) under
compression and expansion pressure is reported. First-principles total-energy
calculations reveal that the rutile structure is the most stable phase among
the phases of GeO2, while SiO2 preferentially forms quartz. GeO4
tetrahedras of quartz and cristobalite GeO2 phases at the equilibrium volume
are more significantly distorted than those of SiO2. Moreover, in the case
of quartz GeO2 and cristobalite GeO2, all O-Ge-O bond angles vary when
the volume of the GeO2 bulk changes from the equilibrium point, which causes
further deformation of tetrahedra. In contrast, the tilt angle formed by
Si-O-Si in SiO2 markedly changes. This flexibility of the O-Ge-O bonds
reduces the stress at the Ge/GeO2 interface due to the lattice-constant
mismatch and results in the low defective interface observed in the experiments
[Matsubara \textit{et al.}: Appl. Phys. Lett. \textbf{93} (2008) 032104; Hosoi
\textit{et al.}: Appl. Phys. Lett. \textbf{94} (2009) 202112].Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures and 2 table