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A 1D Vanadium Dioxide Nanochannel Constructed via Electric‐Field‐Induced Ion Transport and its Superior Metal–Insulator Transition
96
Citations
61
References
2017
Year
Nanoscale manipulation of materials' physicochemical properties offers distinguished possibility to the development of novel electronic devices with ultrasmall dimension, fast operation speed, and low energy consumption characteristics. This is especially important as the present semiconductor manufacturing technique is approaching the end of miniaturization campaign in the near future. Here, a superior metal-insulator transition (MIT) of a 1D VO<sub>2</sub> nanochannel constructed through an electric-field-induced oxygen ion migration process in V<sub>2</sub> O<sub>5</sub> thin film is reported for the first time. A sharp and reliable MIT transition with a steep turn-on voltage slope of <0.5 mV dec<sup>-1</sup> , fast switching speed of 17 ns, low energy consumption of 8 pJ, and low variability of <4.3% is demonstrated in the VO<sub>2</sub> nanochannel device. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy observation and theoretical computation verify that the superior electrical properties of the present device can be ascribed to the electroformation of nanoscale VO<sub>2</sub> nanochannel in V<sub>2</sub> O<sub>5</sub> thin films. More importantly, the incorporation of the present device into a Pt/HfO<sub>2</sub> /Pt/VO<sub>2</sub> /Pt 1S1R unit can ensure the correct reading of the HfO<sub>2</sub> memory continuously for 10<sup>7</sup> cycles, therefore demonstrating its great possibility as a reliable selector in high-density crossbar memory arrays.
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