Electrically reversible cracks in an intermetallic film controlled by an electric field

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Abstract

Cracks in solid-state materials are typically irreversible. Here we report electrically reversible opening and closing of nanoscale cracks in an intermetallic thin film grown on a ferroelectric substrate driven by a small electric field (~0.83 kV/cm). Accordingly, a nonvolatile colossal electroresistance on-off ratio of more than 108 is measured across the cracks in the intermetallic film at room temperature. Cracks are easily formed with low-frequency voltage cycling and remain stable when the device is operated at high frequency, which offers intriguing potential for next-generation high-frequency memory applications. Moreover, endurance testing demonstrates that the opening and closing of such cracks can reach over 107 cycles under 10-μs pulses, without catastrophic failure of the film.

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Liu, Z. Q., Liu, J. H., Biegalski, M. D., Hu, J. M., Shang, S. L., Ji, Y., … Ramesh, R. (2018). Electrically reversible cracks in an intermetallic film controlled by an electric field. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02454-8

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