| Literature DB >> 28605067 |
Byeong-Gyu Chae1, Jae-Bok Seol2, Jeong-Hwan Song1, Kyungjoon Baek1,3, Sang-Ho Oh1,3, Hyunsang Hwang1, Chan-Gyung Park1,2.
Abstract
Creation of nanometer-scale conductive filaments in resistive switching devices makes them appealing for advanced electrical applications. While in situ electrical probing transmission electron microscopy promotes fundamental investigations of how the conductive filament comes into existence, it does not provide proof-of-principle observations for the filament growth. Here, using advanced microscopy techniques, electrical, 3D compositional, and structural information of the switching-induced conductive filament are described. It is found that during in situ probing microscopy of a Ag/TiO2 /Pt device showing both memory- and threshold-switching characteristics, a crystalline Ag-doped TiO2 forms at vacant sites on the device surface and acts as the conductive filament. More importantly, change in filament morphology varying with applied compliance currents determines the underlying switching mechanisms that govern either memory or threshold response. When focusing more on threshold switching features, it is demonstrated that the structural disappearance of the filament arises at the end of the constricted region and leads to the spontaneous phase transformation from crystalline conductive state into an initial amorphous insulator. Use of the proposed method enables a new pathway for observing nanosized features in a variety of devices at the atomic scale in three dimensions.Entities:
Keywords: atom probe microscopy; conductive filaments; phase transformations; resistive switching; transmission electron microscopy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28605067 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201701752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849