Theoretical current-voltage characteristics of ferroelectric tunnel junctions
H. Kohlstedt (1), N. A. Pertsev (1, 2), J. Rodriguez Contreras (1),, R. Waser (1, 3) ((1) Institut fur Festkorperforschung, CNI,, Forschungszentrum Juelich, Juelich, Germany, (2) A. F. Ioffe, Physico-Technical Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg,, Russia

TL;DR
This paper models the current-voltage behavior of ferroelectric tunnel junctions, highlighting how piezoelectric strain and depolarizing fields influence resistance switching, with implications for non-volatile memory devices.
Contribution
It provides a theoretical analysis of how strain and depolarizing fields affect FTJ conductance and hysteresis, advancing understanding of their switching mechanisms.
Findings
Piezoelectric strain shifts conductance minima from zero voltage.
Depolarizing fields alter barrier resistance after polarization reversal.
Asymmetric FTJs exhibit larger resistance on/off ratios for memory applications.
Abstract
We present the concept of ferroelectric tunnel junctions (FTJs). These junctions consist of two metal electrodes separated by a nanometer-thick ferroelectric barrier. The current-voltage characteristics of FTJs are analyzed under the assumption that the direct electron tunneling represents the dominant conduction mechanism. First, the influence of converse piezoelectric effect inherent in ferroelectric materials on the tunnel current is described. The calculations show that the lattice strains of piezoelectric origin modify the current-voltage relationship owing to strain-induced changes of the barrier thickness, electron effective mass, and position of the conduction-band edge. Remarkably, the conductance minimum becomes shifted from zero voltage due to the piezoelectric effect, and a strain-related resistive switching takes place after the polarization reversal in a ferroelectric…
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