Defect Motion as a Driver of Ramp Reversal Memory in VO<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

Recently a new ramp reversal memory effect was observed in VO2, in which the resistivity was observed to increase by 20% upon applying a particular temperature sequence. One possible microscopic mechanism for the phenomenon is that "scars" accumulate wherever the metal-insulator domain walls reverse direction. [Vardi et al., Adv. Mater., 2017] By using optical microscopy to track the evolution of metal and insulator domains in VO2 during the ramp reversal temperature protocol, we find that memory also accumulates deep inside the metal/insulator patches rather than only at phase boundaries, which was not foreseen by the "scar" model. We develop a new model based on defect motion during the ramp reversal protocol, using the diffusion-segregation equation. Our calculations show that memory can happen deep inside the metallic and insulating regions and that certain regions in the sample can have a lowered transition temperature rather than a raised one, in agreement with our optical microscopy data. Our results pave the way toward using this "non-volatile" memory effect to mimic synaptic behavior for neuromorphic computing.

*S.B., F.S., and E.W.C. acknowledge support from NSF Grant No. DMR-2006192 and the Research Corporation for Science Advancement Cottrell SEED Award. S.B. acknowledges support from a Bilsland Dissertation Fellowship. E.W.C. acknowledges support from a Fulbright Fellowship. P.S. and I.S. acknowledge support from AFOSR Grant No. FA9550-20-1-0242. M.A.B., L.A., and A.Z. acknowledge support from Cofund AI4theSciences under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant No. 945304.

Presenters

  • Yuxin Sun

    • Purdue University

Authors

  • Yuxin Sun

    • Purdue University
  • Sayan Basak

    • Purdue University
  • Erica W Carlson

    • Purdue University
  • Pavel Salev

    • University of California, San Diego
  • IVAN K SCHULLER

    • University of California, San Diego
    • Department of Physics, University of California San Diego
    • Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego
  • Melissa Alzate Banguero

    • ESPCI Paris
  • Lionel Aigouy

    • ESPCI PSL-Sorbonne University
    • ESPCI PSL-CNRS
    • ESPCI Paris
    • EPCI PSL-CNRS
  • Alexandre Zimmers

    • ESPCI PSL-Sorbonne University