APL Materials (Jul 2019)

Direct observation of delithiation as the origin of analog memristance in LixNbO2

  • Sebastian A. Howard,
  • Christopher N. Singh,
  • Galo J. Paez,
  • Matthew J. Wahila,
  • Linda W. Wangoh,
  • Shawn Sallis,
  • Keith Tirpak,
  • Yufeng Liang,
  • David Prendergast,
  • Mateusz Zuba,
  • Jatinkumar Rana,
  • Alex Weidenbach,
  • Timothy M. McCrone,
  • Wanli Yang,
  • Tien-Lin Lee,
  • Fanny Rodolakis,
  • William Doolittle,
  • Wei-Cheng Lee,
  • Louis F. J. Piper

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5108525
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 7
pp. 071103 – 071103-6

Abstract

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The discovery of analog LixNbO2 memristors revealed a promising new memristive mechanism wherein the diffusion of Li+ rather than O2− ions enables precise control of the resistive states. However, directly correlating lithium concentration with changes to the electronic structure in active layers remains a challenge and is required to truly understand the underlying physics. Chemically delithiated single crystals of LiNbO2 present a model system for correlating lithium variation with spectroscopic signatures from operando soft x-ray spectroscopy studies of device active layers. Using electronic structure modeling of the x-ray spectroscopy of LixNbO2 single crystals, we demonstrate that the intrinsic memristive behavior in LixNbO2 active layers results from field-induced degenerate p-type doping. We show that electrical operation of LixNbO2-based memristors is viable even at marginal Li deficiency and that the analog memristive switching occurs well before the system is fully metallic. This study serves as a benchmark for material synthesis and characterization of future LixNbO2-based memristor devices and suggests that valence change switching is a scalable alternative that circumvents the electroforming typically required for filamentary-based memristors.