Physical origins of current and temperature controlled negative differential resistances in NbO2

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Abstract

Negative differential resistance behavior in oxide memristors, especially those using NbO2, is gaining renewed interest because of its potential utility in neuromorphic computing. However, there has been a decade-long controversy over whether the negative differential resistance is caused by a relatively low-temperature non-linear transport mechanism or a high-temperature Mott transition. Resolving this issue will enable consistent and robust predictive modeling of this phenomenon for different applications. Here we examine NbO2 memristors that exhibit both a current-controlled and a temperature-controlled negative differential resistance. Through thermal and chemical spectromicroscopy and numerical simulations, we confirm that the former is caused by a ~400 K non-linear-transport-driven instability and the latter is caused by the ~1000 K Mott metal-insulator transition, for which the thermal conductance counter-intuitively decreases in the metallic state relative to the insulating state.

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Kumar, S., Wang, Z., Davila, N., Kumari, N., Norris, K. J., Huang, X., … Williams, R. S. (2017). Physical origins of current and temperature controlled negative differential resistances in NbO2. Nature Communications, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00773-4

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