Evidence for the bias-driven migration of oxygen vacancies in amorphous non-stoichiometric gallium oxide

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Abstract

The conductivity of gallium oxide thin films is strongly dependent on the growth temperature when they deposited by pulsed laser deposition under vacuum environment, exhibiting an insulative-to-metallic transition with the decrease of the temperature. The high conductive gallium oxide films deposited at low temperature are amorphous, non-stoichiometric, and rich in oxygen vacancy. Large changes in electrical resistance are observed in these non-stoichiometric thin films. The wide variety of hysteretic shapes in the I-V curves depend on the voltage-sweep rate, evidencing that the time-dependent redistribution of oxygen vacancy driven by bias is the controlling parameter for the resistance of gallium oxide.

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Guo, D. Y., Qian, Y. P., Su, Y. L., Shi, H. Z., Li, P. G., Wu, J. T., … Tang, W. H. (2017). Evidence for the bias-driven migration of oxygen vacancies in amorphous non-stoichiometric gallium oxide. AIP Advances, 7(6). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4990566

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