| Literature DB >> 28721944 |
Firman Mangasa Simanjuntak1, Sridhar Chandrasekaran, Bhaskar Pattanayak, Chun-Chieh Lin, Tseung-Yuen Tseng.
Abstract
We explore the use of cubic-zinc peroxide (ZnO2) as a switching material for electrochemical metallization memory (ECM) cell. The ZnO2 was synthesized with a simple peroxide surface treatment. Devices made without surface treatment exhibits a high leakage current due to the self-doped nature of the hexagonal-ZnO material. Thus, its switching behavior can only be observed when a very high current compliance is employed. The synthetic ZnO2 layer provides a sufficient resistivity to the Cu/ZnO2/ZnO/ITO devices. The high resistivity of ZnO2 encourages the formation of a conducting bridge to activate the switching behavior at a lower operation current. Volatile and non-volatile switching behaviors with sufficient endurance and an adequate memory window are observed in the surface-treated devices. The room temperature retention of more than 104 s confirms the non-volatility behavior of the devices. In addition, our proposed device structure is able to work at a lower operation current among other reported ZnO-based ECM cells.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28721944 DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/aa80b4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanotechnology ISSN: 0957-4484 Impact factor: 3.874