Current-induced energy barrier suppression for electromigration from first principles
Ruoxing Zhang, Ivan Rungger, Stefano Sanvito, Shimin Hou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a first-principles method to evaluate current-induced forces in nanoscale junctions, enabling atomic relaxation and electromigration analysis under bias using Green's functions within density functional theory.
Contribution
The authors develop an efficient Green's function-based approach for calculating current-induced forces and structural relaxation in nanoscale systems, validated through benchmark calculations and applied to electromigration scenarios.
Findings
Zigzag Al nanowires break at 1.4 V under bias.
Current-induced forces can cause Si atom migration on nanotubes.
Migration is driven solely by the wind force component.
Abstract
We present an efficient method for evaluating current-induced forces in nanoscale junctions, which naturally integrates into the non-equilibrium Green's function formalism implemented within density functional theory. This allows us to perform dynamical atomic relaxation in the presence of an electric current while also evaluating the current-voltage characteristics. The central idea consists in expressing the system energy density matrix in terms of Green's functions. In order to validate our implementation we perform a series of benchmark calculations, both at zero and finite bias. Firstly we evaluate the current-induced forces acting over an Al nanowire and compare them with previously published results for fixed geometries. Then we perform structural relaxation of the same wires under bias and determine the critical voltage at which they break. We find that, while a perfectly…
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