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Inverse polarity of the resistive switching effect and strong inhomogeneity in nanoscale YBCO-metal contacts
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Citations
31
References
2016
Year
EngineeringResistive Switching EffectInverse PolaritySemiconductorsStrong InhomogeneityFerroelectric ApplicationTunneling MicroscopyNanoelectronicsSuperconductivityResistance MicroscopyHigh Tc SuperconductorsMaterials ScienceHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsNanotechnologyOxide ElectronicsSemiconductor MaterialElectrical PropertySpecific ResistanceApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsYbco CompoundThin Films
We have studied a bipolar resistive switching phenomenon in c-axis oriented normal-state YBa2Cu3O7-c (YBCO) thin films at room temperature by scanning spreading resistance microscopy (SSRM) and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) techniques. The most striking experimental finding has been the opposite (in contrast to the previous room and low-temperature data for planar metal counter-electrode-YBCO bilayers) voltage-bias polarity of the switching effect in all SSRM and a number of STM measurements. We have assumed that the hysteretic phenomena in current-voltage characteristics of YBCO-based contacts can be explained by migration of oxygen-vacancy defects and, as a result, by the formation or dissolution of more or less conductive regions near the metal–YBCO interface. To support our interpretation of the macroscopic resistive switching phenomenon, a minimalist model that describes radical modifications of the oxygen-vacancy effective charge in terms of a charge-wind effect was proposed. It was shown theoretically that due to the momentum exchange between current carriers (holes in the YBCO compound) and activated oxygen ions, the direction in which oxygen vacancies are moving is defined by the balance between the direct electrostatic force on them and that caused by the current-carrier flow.
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