I. Morgenstern, K.A. Müller, et al.
Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter
Lattice-resolved, video-rate environmental transmission electron microscopy shows the formation of a liquid Au-Ge layer on sub-30-nm Au catalyst crystals and the transition of this two-phase Au-Ge/Au coexistence to a completely liquid Au-Ge droplet during isothermal digermane exposure at temperatures far below the bulk Au-Ge eutectic temperature. Upon Ge crystal nucleation and subsequent Ge nanowire growth, the catalyst either recrystallizes or remains liquid, apparently stabilized by the Ge supersaturation. We argue that there is a large energy barrier to nucleate diamond-cubic Ge, but not to nucleate the Au-Ge liquid. As a result, the system follows the more kinetically accessible path, forming a liquid even at 240 °C, although there is no liquid along the most thermodynamically favorable path below 360 °C. © 2010 American Chemical Society.
I. Morgenstern, K.A. Müller, et al.
Physica B: Physics of Condensed Matter
Kafai Lai, Alan E. Rosenbluth, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2007
William G. Van der Sluys, Alfred P. Sattelberger, et al.
Polyhedron
J.H. Kaufman, Owen R. Melroy, et al.
Synthetic Metals