Resistive-Switching Dynamics in Poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) Thin Films under Perforated Bottom Electrode
Sirsendu Ghosh, Pramod Kumar

TL;DR
This study investigates how perforated bottom electrodes influence resistive switching in P3HT organic thin films, revealing that metal filament formation and Joule heating significantly affect switching mechanisms and states.
Contribution
It demonstrates that patterned electrodes enhance local electric fields, promoting filament formation and revealing multiple switching mechanisms including filament-based and Joule heating effects.
Findings
Perforated electrodes increase local electric fields, aiding filament formation.
Resistive switching involves both filament formation and Joule heating effects.
Inverted switching behavior is observed due to Joule heating-induced amorphization.
Abstract
The effect on the resistive switching (RS) mechanism in organic semiconductor (OSC), Poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT), due to the presence of the perforated bottom electrode (PBE) is investigated. The simulation shows a high local electric field at the edges of a patterned bottom electrode (BE), which can increase the probability of metal filament formation due to high current density, suggesting that the use of a PBE can assist the RS mechanism. RS involves switching from the high resistive state (HRS) to the low resistive state (LRS) known as the "SET" process at higher positive bias, and returning to HRS from LRS is known as the "RESET" process, which can be achieved at a negative bias. Various switching mechanisms are segregated from each other by the obtained current response to applied voltage. RS due to the formation of complete metal filaments between the top and bottom…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing · Conducting polymers and applications · Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics
