Compression for data archiving and backup revisited
Corneliu Constantinescu
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2009
We studied the thermally induced amorphous-to-crystalline transformation in RF sputtered Te-Se-I films with an approximately constant Te: Se ratio of 3 and with different halogen concentrations in the range 0-20 at % I. Crystallization usually occured via the formation and growth of cylindrites (two-dimensional, radially aligned polycrystalline aggregates) which exhibited a branched fibrillar morphology. The major effects of the halogen on the transformation were as follows: (i) The halogen strongly stabilized the amorphous phase. Crystallization took place when there was substantial superheating at temperatures above 80°C after the halogen was depleted. (ii) The halogen restricted the cylindrite formation to a thin surface layer and dictated the details of the branched morphology. (iii) In the halogenated films all the cylindrites appeared suddenly rather than nucleating at a constant rate and their density was reduced by a factor of 100. © 1994.
Corneliu Constantinescu
SPIE Optical Engineering + Applications 2009
A.B. McLean, R.H. Williams
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics
A. Nagarajan, S. Mukherjee, et al.
Journal of Applied Mechanics, Transactions ASME
D.D. Awschalom, J.-M. Halbout
Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials