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Antiphase Boundaries Constitute Fast Cation Diffusion Paths in SrTiO 3 Memristive Devices
Author(s) -
Heisig Thomas,
Kler Joe,
Du Hongchu,
Baeumer Christoph,
Hensling Felix,
Glöß Maria,
Moors Marco,
Locatelli Andrea,
Menteş Tevfik Onur,
Genuzio Francesca,
Mayer Joachim,
De Souza Roger A.,
Dittmann Regina
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.202004118
Subject(s) - materials science , chemical physics , electric field , diffusion , electrical conductor , nanoscopic scale , transmission electron microscopy , protein filament , condensed matter physics , oxide , microstructure , molecular dynamics , ion , nanotechnology , metal , composite material , computational chemistry , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , metallurgy , thermodynamics
Abstract Resistive switching in transition metal oxide‐based metal‐insulator‐metal structures relies on the reversible drift of ions under an applied electric field on the nanoscale. In such structures, the formation of conductive filaments is believed to be induced by the electric‐field driven migration of oxygen anions, while the cation sublattice is often considered to be inactive. This simple mechanistic picture of the switching process is incomplete as both oxygen anions and metal cations have been previously identified as mobile species under device operation. Here, spectromicroscopic techniques combined with atomistic simulations to elucidate the diffusion and drift processes that take place in the resistive switching model material SrTiO 3 are used. It is demonstrated that the conductive filament in epitaxial SrTiO 3 devices is not homogenous but exhibits a complex microstructure. Specifically, the filament consists of a conductive Ti 3+ ‐rich region and insulating Sr‐rich islands. Transmission electron microscopy shows that the Sr‐rich islands emerge above Ruddlesden–Popper type antiphase boundaries. The role of these extended defects is clarified by molecular static and molecular dynamic simulations, which reveal that the Ruddlesden–Popper antiphase boundaries constitute diffusion fast‐paths for Sr cations in the perovskites structure.

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