| Literature DB >> 29882270 |
Thomas Heisig1, Christoph Baeumer1, Ute N Gries2, Michael P Mueller2, Camilla La Torre3, Michael Luebben3, Nicolas Raab1, Hongchu Du4, Stephan Menzel1, David N Mueller1, Chun-Lin Jia4, Joachim Mayer4, Rainer Waser1,3, Ilia Valov1, Roger A De Souza2, Regina Dittmann1.
Abstract
Resistive switching based on transition metal oxide memristive devices is suspected to be caused by the electric-field-driven motion and internal redistribution of oxygen vacancies. Deriving the detailed mechanistic picture of the switching process is complicated, however, by the frequently observed influence of the surrounding atmosphere. Specifically, the presence or absence of water vapor in the atmosphere has a strong impact on the switching properties, but the redox reactions between water and the active layer have yet to be clarified. To investigate the role of oxygen and water species during resistive switching in greater detail, isotope labeling experiments in a N2 /H218 O tracer gas atmosphere combined with time-of-flight secondary-ion mass spectrometry are used. It is explicitly demonstrated that during the RESET operation in resistive switching SrTiO3 -based memristive devices, oxygen is incorporated directly from water molecules or oxygen molecules into the active layer. In humid atmospheres, the reaction pathway via water molecules predominates. These findings clearly resolve the role of humidity as both oxidizing agent and source of protonic defects during the RESET operation.Entities:
Keywords: SIMS; SrTiO3; memristor; oxygen exchange; resistive switching
Year: 2018 PMID: 29882270 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201800957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849