Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 February 2011
The amorphous semiconducting phase (a-sc) of Si or Ge is so resistant to crystallization that rapid heating may bring it into a temperature regime in which it melts. Such melting might occur in one or the other of two ways, either homogeneously, by the reverse of the glass transition, to a viscous semi-conducting melt (ℓ-sc) or by transition, probably by nucleation and growth, to the molten metallic state (ℓm). Using the self-diffusion constant of the crystalline elements in conjunction with the Stokes-Einstein equation, upper limiting values of the glass transition (a-sc→ℓ-sc) temperatures of Si and Ge were calculated. These were of the order 0.6 to 0.65 Tcℓ for slow and 1.1 Tcℓ for ultra rapid heating, where Tcℓ is the equilibrium melting temperature of the crystal. Arguments are given that superheating to a temperature 1.15 to 1.25 Taℓ (a-sc↔ℓm in equilibrium at temperature T = Taℓ< Tcℓ) may be required for copious internal nucleation of im in a-sc. At lesser superheating the transition must be initiated at internal flaws (e.g. voids) or at the external surface of the a-sc film. Therefore the superheating at perceptible onset of the transition during rapid heating can vary widely from specimen to specimen, depending on the flaw concentration and how the external surface of a-sc was treated.