Bismuth telluride (Bi 2 Te 3 ) has garnered significant interest in thermoelectric applications and threedimensional topological insulators due to its unique electronic, transport, and thermal properties. Bi 2 Te 3 and Sb 2 Te 3 chalcogenide compounds have the same crystal structure. While Sb 2 Te 3 has been shown to be a prototypical phase change memory (PCM) compound along the pseudobinary tie-line of Ge-Sb-Te alloys, whether Bi 2 Te 3 can also exhibit PCM functionality is still not well established. In this work, a systematic study on the structural, dynamical, and electronic properties of amorphous Bi 2 Te 3 during the quenching process has been performed by using ab initio molecular dynamics simulations. Pair correlation function, coordination number, bond-angle distribution functions, and a novel atomistic cluster alignment method are used to explore the structural characteristics of Bi 2 Te 3 as a function of temperature. Our study shows that there are many distorted octahedral clusters in amorphous Bi 2 Te 3 . In comparison with the local structures in Sb 2 Te 3 , we found that the degree of distortion of the octahedrons in the Bi 2 Te 3 system is smaller than that in Sb 2 Te 3 system. Moreover, the changes in the dynamical properties of Bi 2 Te 3 from liquid to glassy state are also explored. The approximate range of liquid-to-glass transition temperature is determined to be between 673 and 723 K. The electronic properties of Bi 2 Te 3 and Sb 2 Te 3 are also analysed by density-of-states and Bader charge calculations, both of them in glass state are semiconductors. Our studies provide useful insights into the local structure and dynamical properties of Bi 2 Te 3 at the atomistic level during the fast cooling process, and suggest that the compound can be a candidate for PCM materials.