Unipolar resistive switching in metal oxide/organic semiconductor non-volatile memories as a critical phenomenon

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Abstract

Diodes incorporating a bilayer of an organic semiconductor and a wide bandgap metal oxide can show unipolar, non-volatile memory behavior after electroforming. The prolonged bias voltage stress induces defects in the metal oxide with an areal density exceeding 1017m-2. We explain the electrical bistability by the coexistence of two thermodynamically stable phases at the interface between an organic semiconductor and metal oxide. One phase contains mainly ionized defects and has a low work function, while the other phase has mainly neutral defects and a high work function. In the diodes, domains of the phase with a low work function constitute current filaments. The phase composition and critical temperature are derived from a 2D Ising model as a function of chemical potential. The model predicts filamentary conduction exhibiting a negative differential resistance and nonvolatile memory behavior. The model is expected to be generally applicable to any bilayer system that shows unipolar resistive switching.

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Bory, B. F., Rocha, P. R. F., Gomes, H. L., De Leeuw, D. M., & Meskers, S. C. J. (2015). Unipolar resistive switching in metal oxide/organic semiconductor non-volatile memories as a critical phenomenon. Journal of Applied Physics, 118(20). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4936349

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