Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films

Reversible and reproducible formation and dissolution of silver conductive filaments are studied in Ag-photodoped thin-film Ge40S60 subjected to electric fields. A tip-planar geometry is employed, where a conductive-atomic-force microscopy tip is the tip electrode and a silver patch is the planar el...

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Main Authors: J. Orava, M. N. Kozicki, S. N. Yannopoulos, A. L. Greer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIP Publishing LLC 2015-07-01
Series:AIP Advances
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4927006
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spelling doaj-25f7416d32d74416888b9aaccd480a7d2020-11-25T00:37:54ZengAIP Publishing LLCAIP Advances2158-32262015-07-0157077134077134-1010.1063/1.4927006035507ADVReversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 filmsJ. Orava0M. N. Kozicki1S. N. Yannopoulos2A. L. Greer3Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy, University of Cambridge, 27 Charles Babbage Road, Cambridge CB3 0FS, United KingdomSchool of Electrical, Computer, and Energy Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona 85287-6206, USAFoundation of Research and Technology Hellas - Institute of Chemical Engineering Sciences (FORTH/ICE-HT), Patras, P. O. Box 1414, GreeceDepartment of Materials Science & Metallurgy, University of Cambridge, 27 Charles Babbage Road, Cambridge CB3 0FS, United KingdomReversible and reproducible formation and dissolution of silver conductive filaments are studied in Ag-photodoped thin-film Ge40S60 subjected to electric fields. A tip-planar geometry is employed, where a conductive-atomic-force microscopy tip is the tip electrode and a silver patch is the planar electrode. We highlight an inherent “memory” effect in the amorphous chalcogenide solid-state electrolyte, in which particular silver-ion migration pathways are preserved “memorized” during writing and erasing cycles. The “memorized” pathways reflect structural changes in the photodoped chalcogenide film. Structural changes due to silver photodoping, and electrically-induced structural changes arising from silver migration, are elucidated using Raman spectroscopy. Conductive filament formation, dissolution, and electron (reduction) efficiency in a lateral device geometry are related to operation of the nano-ionic Programmable Metallization Cell memory and to newly emerging chalcogenide-based lateral geometry MEMS technologies. The methods in this work can also be used for qualitative multi-parameter sampling of metal/amorphous-chalcogenide combinations, characterizing the growth/dissolution rates, retention and endurance of fractal conductive filaments, with the aim of optimizing devices.http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4927006
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J. Orava
M. N. Kozicki
S. N. Yannopoulos
A. L. Greer
spellingShingle J. Orava
M. N. Kozicki
S. N. Yannopoulos
A. L. Greer
Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
AIP Advances
author_facet J. Orava
M. N. Kozicki
S. N. Yannopoulos
A. L. Greer
author_sort J. Orava
title Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
title_short Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
title_full Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
title_fullStr Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
title_full_unstemmed Reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in Ag-Ge40S60 films
title_sort reversible migration of silver on memorized pathways in ag-ge40s60 films
publisher AIP Publishing LLC
series AIP Advances
issn 2158-3226
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Reversible and reproducible formation and dissolution of silver conductive filaments are studied in Ag-photodoped thin-film Ge40S60 subjected to electric fields. A tip-planar geometry is employed, where a conductive-atomic-force microscopy tip is the tip electrode and a silver patch is the planar electrode. We highlight an inherent “memory” effect in the amorphous chalcogenide solid-state electrolyte, in which particular silver-ion migration pathways are preserved “memorized” during writing and erasing cycles. The “memorized” pathways reflect structural changes in the photodoped chalcogenide film. Structural changes due to silver photodoping, and electrically-induced structural changes arising from silver migration, are elucidated using Raman spectroscopy. Conductive filament formation, dissolution, and electron (reduction) efficiency in a lateral device geometry are related to operation of the nano-ionic Programmable Metallization Cell memory and to newly emerging chalcogenide-based lateral geometry MEMS technologies. The methods in this work can also be used for qualitative multi-parameter sampling of metal/amorphous-chalcogenide combinations, characterizing the growth/dissolution rates, retention and endurance of fractal conductive filaments, with the aim of optimizing devices.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4927006
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