Role of Oxygen Defects in Conductive-Filament Formation in Y2O3-Based Analog RRAM Devices as Revealed by Fluctuation Spectroscopy
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Date
2020
Volume
14
Issue
3
Journal
Physical review applied
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Publisher
College Park, Md. [u.a.] : American Physical Society
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Abstract
Low-frequency noise in Y2O3-based resistive random-access memory devices with analog switching is studied at intermediate resistive states and as a function of dc cycling. A universal 1/fα-type behavior is found, with a frequency exponent of α≈1.2 that is independent of the applied reset voltage or the device resistance and is attributed to the intrinsic abundance of oxygen vacancies unique to the structure of yttria. Remarkably, the noise magnitude in the high resistive state systematically decreases through dc training. This effect is attributed to the stabilization of the conductive filament via the consumption of oxygen vacancies, thus reducing the number of active fluctuators in the vicinity of the filament.
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Citation
Piros, E., Lonsky, M., Petzold, S., Zintler, A., Sharath, S. U., Vogel, T., et al. (2020). Role of Oxygen Defects in Conductive-Filament Formation in Y2O3-Based Analog RRAM Devices as Revealed by Fluctuation Spectroscopy (College Park, Md. [u.a.] : American Physical Society). College Park, Md. [u.a.] : American Physical Society. https://doi.org//10.1103/PhysRevApplied.14.034029
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CC BY 4.0 Unported