Scientific Reports (Aug 2017)

Three-terminal resistive switch based on metal/metal oxide redox reactions

  • Mantao Huang,
  • Aik Jun Tan,
  • Maxwell Mann,
  • Uwe Bauer,
  • Raoul Ouedraogo,
  • Geoffrey S. D. Beach

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06954-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract A solid-state three-terminal resistive switch based on gate-voltage-tunable reversible oxidation of a thin-film metallic channel is demonstrated. The switch is composed of a cobalt wire placed under a GdOx layer and a Au top electrode. The lateral resistance of the wire changes with the transition between cobalt and cobalt oxide controlled by a voltage applied to the top electrode. The kinetics of the oxidation and reduction process are examined through time- and temperature-dependent transport measurements. It is shown that that reversible voltage induced lateral resistance switching with a ratio of 103 can be achieved at room temperature. The reversible non-volatile redox reaction between metal and metal oxide may provide additional degrees of freedom for post-fabrication control of properties of solid-state materials. This type of three-terminal device has potential applications in neuromorphic computing and multilevel data storage, as well as applications that require controlling a relatively large current.