| Literature DB >> 29323199 |
Hang Qian1,2, Hao Tong3,4, Ming-Ze He1,2, Hong-Kai Ji1,2, Ling-Jun Zhou1,2, Ming Xu2, Xiang-Shui Miao1,2.
Abstract
The tunable disorder of vacancies upon annealing is an important character of crystalline phase-change material Ge2Sb2Te5 (GST). A variety of resistance states caused by different degrees of disorder can lead to the development of multilevel memory devices, which could bring a revolution to the memory industry by significantly increasing the storage density and inspiring the neuromorphic computing. This work focuses on the study of disorder-induced carrier localization which could result in multiple resistance levels of crystalline GST. To analyze the effect of carrier localization on multiple resistant levels, the intrinsic field effect (the change in surface conductance with an applied transverse electric field) of crystalline GST was measured, in which GST films were annealed at different temperatures. The field effect measurement is an important complement to conventional transport measurement techniques. The field effect mobility was acquired and showed temperature activation, a hallmark of carrier localization. Based on the relationship between field effect mobility and annealing temperature, we demonstrate that the annealing shifts the mobility edge towards the valence-band edge, delocalizing more carriers. The insight of carrier transport in multilevel crystalline states is of fundamental relevance for the development of multilevel phase change data storage.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29323199 PMCID: PMC5765150 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-18964-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Sketch of the device structure. When a gate voltage (V ) is applied, carriers are induced in the semiconductor. The drain voltage (V ) is applied between source and drain electrodes, and the resulting channel current (I ) was monitored to detect the field effect. (b) TEM image of the back-gated structure device. The thickness of GST film is controlled to 10 nm.
Figure 2(a) Temperature dependence of the GST devices resistance with step annealing temperature. The thermal annealing induced MIT is observed. (b) Evolution of XRD patterns of 10 nm GST films with increasing T . The GST has a fcc structure when the T is between 150 °C and 200 °C and transforms to the hexagonal phase above 250 °C.
Figure 3(a) Gate modulation of drain current for GST sample annealed at 150 °C (b) Change in source-to-drain current versus gate voltage with increasing T . The field effect induced current increases significantly with the increasing T .
Figure 4(a) Band diagram of MIS structure under applied bias voltage. (b) The XPS spectra of the valence band for GST films with increasing T between 150 °C and 190 °C. The Fermi level (E = 0 eV) of GST films are all located near the VBM. (c) Extracted excess charge field effect mobility against temperature showing the Arrhenius mobility-temperature relationship. (d) Field effect mobility versus annealing temperature. The field effect mobility increases with increasing annealing temperature, indicating the carrier delocalization.