Using single crystalline In2Se3 nanowires as a platform, we have studied the RESET switching (from low to high electrical resistance) in this phase-change material under electric pulses. Particularly, we correlated the atomic-scale structural evolutions with local electrical resistance variations, by performing transmission electron microscopy and scanning Kelvin probe microscopy on the same nanowires. By coupling the experimental results with density functional theory calculations, we show that the immobile dislocations generated via vacancy condensations are responsible for the RESET switching and that the material maintains the single crystallinity during the process. This new mechanism is fundamentally different from the crystalline-amorphous transition, which is commonly understood as the underlying process for the RESET switching in similar phase-change materials.
Revised: June 18, 2020 |
Published: August 19, 2016
Citation
Mafi E., X. Tao, W. Zhu, Y. Gao, C.M. Wang, and Y. Gu. 2016.Generation And The Role of Dislocations in Single-crystalline Phase-change In2Se3 Nanowires Under Electrical Pulses.Nanotechnology 27, no. 33:Article No. 335704.PNNL-SA-110190.doi:10.1088/0957-4484/27/33/335704