The role of ion transport phenomena in memristive double barrier devices
Sven Dirkmann, Mirko Hansen, Martin Ziegler, Hermann Kohlstedt, Thomas, Mussenbrock

TL;DR
This paper investigates how ion transport influences the resistive switching in a double barrier memristive device, combining simulations and experiments to reveal the drift of charged defects as a key mechanism.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled circuit and kinetic Monte Carlo model to elucidate ion transport's role in memristive switching, advancing understanding of physical mechanisms.
Findings
Drift of charged defects drives resistive switching.
Oxygen diffusion alters local interface states.
Device exhibits intrinsic current compliance and long retention.
Abstract
In this work we report on the role of ion transport for the dynamic behavior of a double barrier quantum mechanical Al/AlO/NbO/Au memristive device based on numerical simulations in conjunction with experimental measurements. The device consists of an ultra-thin NbO solid state electrolyte between an AlO tunnel barrier and a semiconductor metal interface at an Au electrode. It is shown that the device provides a number of interesting features for potential applications such as an intrinsic current compliance, a relatively long retention time, and no need for an initialization step. Therefore, it is particularly attractive for applications in highly dense random access memories or neuromorphic mixed signal circuits. However, the underlying physical mechanisms of the resistive switching are still not completely understood…
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