Electronegative metal dopants improve switching consistency in Al2O3 resistive switching devices
Zheng Jie Tan, Vrindaa Somjit, Cigdem Toparli, Bilge Yildiz, Nicholas, Fang

TL;DR
Doping Al2O3 resistive switching devices with electronegative metals enhances switching reproducibility and yield, facilitating reliable neuromorphic hardware and enabling multibit analog computing through controlled oxygen vacancy formation.
Contribution
This study demonstrates that electronegative metal dopants improve resistive switching consistency in Al2O3 devices, supported by experimental validation across multiple dopants.
Findings
Enhanced reproducibility with Au, Pt, Pd doping
Superior device yield and stability
Gradual SET transition enabling multibit switching
Abstract
Resistive random access memories are promising for non-volatile memory and brain-inspired computing applications. High variability and low yield of these devices are key drawbacks hindering reliable training of physical neural networks. In this study, we show that doping an oxide electrolyte, Al2O3, with electronegative metals makes resistive switching significantly more reproducible, surpassing the reproducibility requirements for obtaining reliable hardware neuromorphic circuits. The underlying mechanism is the ease of creating oxygen vacancies in the vicinity of electronegative dopants, due to the capture of the associated electrons by dopant mid-gap states, and the weakening of Al-O bonds. These oxygen vacancies and vacancy clusters also bind significantly to the dopant, thereby serving as preferential sites and building blocks in the formation of conducting paths. We validate this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing · Ferroelectric and Negative Capacitance Devices · Transition Metal Oxide Nanomaterials
