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Cited 3 time in webofscience Cited 3 time in scopus
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Electrical Characteristics of CMOS-Compatible SiOx-Based Resistive-Switching Devicesopen access

Authors
Koryazhkina, Maria N.Filatov, Dmitry O.Tikhov, Stanislav V.Belov, Alexey I.Serov, Dmitry A.Kryukov, Ruslan N.Zubkov, Sergey Yu.Vorontsov, Vladislav A.Pavlov, Dmitry A.Gryaznov, Evgeny G.Orlova, Elena S.Shchanikov, Sergey A.Mikhaylov, Alexey N.Kim, Sungjun
Issue Date
Jul-2023
Publisher
MDPI
Keywords
memristor; resistive switching; silicon oxide; electrical characteristics; thermal treatment
Citation
Nanomaterials, v.13, no.14, pp 1 - 13
Pages
13
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Nanomaterials
Volume
13
Number
14
Start Page
1
End Page
13
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/19980
DOI
10.3390/nano13142082
ISSN
2079-4991
2079-4991
Abstract
The electrical characteristics and resistive switching properties of memristive devices have been studied in a wide temperature range. The insulator and electrode materials of these devices (silicon oxide and titanium nitride, respectively) are fully compatible with conventional complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication processes. Silicon oxide is also obtained through the low-temperature chemical vapor deposition method. It is revealed that the as-fabricated devices do not require electroforming but their resistance state cannot be stored before thermal treatment. After the thermal treatment, the devices exhibit bipolar-type resistive switching with synaptic behavior. The conduction mechanisms in the device stack are associated with the effect of traps in the insulator, which form filaments in the places where the electric field is concentrated. The filaments shortcut the capacitance of the stack to different degrees in the high-resistance state (HRS) and in the low-resistance state (LRS). As a result, the electron transport possesses an activation nature with relatively low values of activation energy in an HRS. On the contrary, Ohm's law and tunneling are observed in an LRS. CMOS-compatible materials and low-temperature fabrication techniques enable the easy integration of the studied resistive-switching devices with traditional analog-digital circuits to implement new-generation hardware neuromorphic systems.
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