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First-Principles Study on Structural Properties of GeO2_2 and SiO2_2 under Compression and Expansion Pressure

Abstract

The detailed analysis of the structural variations of three GeO2_2 and SiO2_2 polymorphs (α\alpha-quartz, α\alpha-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_2, while SiO2_2 preferentially forms quartz. GeO4_4 tetrahedras of quartz and cristobalite GeO2_2 phases at the equilibrium volume are more significantly distorted than those of SiO2_2. Moreover, in the case of quartz GeO2_2 and cristobalite GeO2_2, all O-Ge-O bond angles vary when the volume of the GeO2_2 bulk changes from the equilibrium point, which causes further deformation of tetrahedra. In contrast, the tilt angle formed by Si-O-Si in SiO2_2 markedly changes. This flexibility of the O-Ge-O bonds reduces the stress at the Ge/GeO2_2 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

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