Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1659981 Surface and Coatings Technology 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

Sputter-deposited CeO2 film in the metal–insulator–metal structure exhibits repeatable resistive switching behavior under voltage sweep. Based on the X-ray diffraction patterns and the cross-sectional scanning electron microscope image, the CeO2 film is polycrystalline with columnar grains perpendicular to the bottom electrode. Moreover, due to the symmetric device structure of Pt/CeO2/Pt, the resistive switching behavior is independent of bias polarity so that both positive and negative voltages can switch the device from high conducting state (ON-state) into low conducting state (OFF-state) and then back to ON-state, which is named non-polar resistive switching. The resistance ratio between two memory states is about five orders of magnitude, which is stable over 104 s at 0.3 V stress. In addition, the resistance ratio decreases with increasing the current compliance during forming process. The stability of ON-state, OFF-state, and as-deposited film state (the state before performing forming process) against temperature is also investigated in this study, showing that the OFF-state is less stable.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Nanotechnology
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