Abstract
Layered phase-change materials in the Ge–Sb–Te-system are widely used in data storage and are the subject of intense research to understand the elusive quantum-chemical origin of their unique properties. To uncover the nature of the underlying periodic wavefunction, we study the interacting atomic orbitals including their phase information as revealed by crystal orbital bond index (COBI) and fragment crystal orbital (FCO) analysis. In full accord with previous and also new findings based on projected force constants (pFC), we demonstrate the decisive role of multicenter bonding along straight atomic connectivities such as Te–Ge–Te and Te–Sb–Te. While the here found multicenter bonding resembles well-established three-center four-electron bonding in molecules, its solid-state manifestation beyond a molecular motif leads to distinct longe-range consequences, thus serving to contextualize the aforementioned material properties usually termed “metavalent”. For example, we suggest multicenter bonding to be the origin of their astonishing bond-breaking and also phase-change behavior. As a hole-in-one, multicenter bonding immediately explains the too small “van der Waals” gaps between individual layers since multicenter bonding forces these gaps to shrink below the nonbonding Te–Te distances.