Permanent Densification of Amorphous Zinc Oxide Under Pressure: A First Principles Study

Loading...

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Average

relationships.isProjectOf

relationships.isJournalIssueOf

Abstract

Ab initio simulations within a generalized gradient approximation are carried out to investigate the densification mechanism of amorphous zinc oxide (a-ZnO) under hydrostatic pressure. In contrast to the crystalline ZnO, the densification of a-ZnO is found to proceed gradually and is associated with a structural modification from a low density amorphous state to a high density amorphous state. Accompanied by the phase transformation, the mean coordination number increases from similar to 4.0 to similar to 5.5. The high-density amorphous form of ZnO has a local structure, partially comparable with that of the rocksalt type ZnO crystal and presents a semiconducting behavior. The phase change is irreversible because upon pressure release, an amorphous model largely consisting of fivefold coordination is recovered. The decompressed model can be, therefore, classified as an intermediate phase between the wurtzite-like and the rocksalt-like amorphous configurations.

Description

Durandurdu, Murat/0000-0001-5636-3183

Keywords

Zno, Amorphous, Densification, Phase Transformation

Fields of Science

0103 physical sciences, 02 engineering and technology, 0210 nano-technology, 01 natural sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Scopus Q

OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
4

Volume

481

Issue

Start Page

27

End Page

32
PlumX Metrics
Citations

CrossRef : 4

Scopus : 4

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 7

SCOPUS™ Citations

4

checked on Jun 02, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

4

checked on Jun 02, 2026

Downloads

8

checked on Jun 02, 2026

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
0.23

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG data is not available