High-Speed Switching of FeRh Memristors

ORAL

Abstract

FeRh is widely studied because of its novel temperature-dependent antiferromagnetic (AFM) to ferromagnetic (FM) phase transition. This AFM-FM phase transition, which is accompanied by a significant change in resistivity, occurs at a critical temperature that can be fine-tuned over a wide range through substitutional doping, strain, and patterning.[1,2] Moreover, the temperature dependence of the transition provides a means to manipulate the state via Joule heating. Recent reports, based on ultrafast pump-probe measurements, show the AFM-FM transition occurs on a sub-picosecond timescale, thus devices operating in switching applications have the potential to operate in excess of 100’s GHz provided adequate thermal dissipation is achieved. In this work we demonstrate high-speed switching of FeRh wires, giving rise to a dynamic memristive device based on a metamagnetic transition. The thermally-induced AFM-FM transition was evaluated using two-terminal devices consisting of an FeRh wire and Ti/Au contacts. We identified geometrical dependencies in the AFM-FM transition temperature, which scaled with both current density and wire length. Pulsed I-V measurements were used to investigate the dynamic Joule heating effects, including the device switching speed and resulting power switching losses accompanying the AFM-FM transition. The lower bound of our device switching time, measured to be near 300 nanoseconds, was limited by measurement equipment limitations, not the material system. The performance of this rudimentary device is comparable to other phase change memory technologies with more intricate device architectures. FeRh could be the basis for a very fast, phase-change approach to future computing.

References:

[1] S. P. Bennett, et al., Mater. Res. Lett. 6, 106 (2018).

[2] C. D. Cress, et al., S. P. Bennett, ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces, 13, 836 (2021).

Presenters

  • Nicholas A Blumenschein

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences

Authors

  • Nicholas A Blumenschein

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Gregory M Stephen

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Cory D Cress

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • Samuel W LaGasse

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • Aubrey T Hanbicki

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences
  • Steven P Bennett

    • United States Naval Research Laboratory
  • Adam L Friedman

    • Laboratory for Physical Sciences