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The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Engineering VANADIUM DIOXIDE TUNNEL JUNCTIONS AND STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION OF ELECTRICALLY DRIVEN INSULATOR TO METAL TRANSITION A Thesis in Electrical Engineering by Eugene Freeman c 2013 Eugene Freeman Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science December 2013 The thesis of Eugene Freeman was reviewed and approved∗ by the following: Suman Datta Professor of Electrical Engineering Thesis Advisor Srinivas Tadigadapa Professor of Electrical Engineering Kultegin Aydin Professor of Electrical Engineering Head of the Department of Electrical Engineering ∗ Signatures are on file in the Graduate School. Abstract Silicon CMOS becomes increasingly difficult to scale with every generational node and there is great interest in developing novel low power and high performance switching mechanisms. Among the various candidates are high speed and abrupt metal insulator transition based switches. The metal insulator transition in vanadium dioxide is sub 100 fs and abrupt. Vanadium dioxide has a low mobility and thus is a poor choice as a channel replacement material. However, modulation of its 0.6 eV bandgap offers a promising method to enable realization of a high speed, metal insulator tunnel field effect transistor. In this thesis the mechanism for a metal insulator based tunnel junction is proposed. An experimental demonstration of a two order of magnitude change in tunneling conductance in nanoscale vanadium dioxide tunnel junctions is shown as a proof of concept of the proposed device. The large conductance change is modeled using direct tunneling and Poole-Frenkel conduction. There exists significant debate on the exact switching mechanism in vanadium dioxide. The structural evolution of tensile strained vanadium dioxide undergoing an electrically induced insulator to metal transition is investigated using hard X-ray diffraction. A metallic rutile filament is found to be the dominant source of conduction after an electronically driven transition, while the majority of the channel area remains in the monoclinic M1 phase. Further analysis revealed that the width of the R filament can be tuned externally using resistive loads in series, enabling tunability of the M1/R phase ratio. Additionally, time resolved X-ray diffraction performed on vanadium dioxide oscillators shows that the oscillations are a result of repeatedly reforming and breaking of an R filament and structural phase transition from M1 to R and back to M1 plays an integral role in the oscillations. iii Table of Contents List of Figures viii List of Tables xiv Acknowledgments xv Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1.1 Introduction to Metal Insulator Transition Based Tunnel Junctions . . . 1 1.2 Metal Insulator Transition in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 VO2 Transition by External Stimuli . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Thesis Outline . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 1.2.1 1.3 Chapter 2 Metal Insulator Transition Theory 10 2.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 2.2 The Peierls Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 2.2.1 Standing waves in a periodic potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2.2.2 Metal Insulator Transition by Ion Dimerization . . . . . . . . . 12 iv 2.2.3 2.3 2.4 Evidence of Peierls Transition in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 The Mott-Hubbard Transition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 2.3.1 Correlated Electrons and Localization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 2.3.2 Evidence of Mott-Hubbard Transition in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . 18 The Hall Effect in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 2.4.1 The Hall Effect . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 2.4.2 Hall Measurements in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Chapter 3 Nanoscale Structural Evolution of the Electrically Driven Transition in Vanadium Dioxide 24 3.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 3.2 Bragg’s Law of Diffraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 3.2.1 Structure Factor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Experimental Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 3.3.1 Two Terminal VO2 Fabrication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 3.3.2 Nanoscale hard X-ray Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Nanoscale X-ray Diffraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 3.4.1 Spatially Resolved Nanoscale X-ray diffraction . . . . . . . . . 30 3.4.2 Filament Size Extraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 3.4.3 Dynamics of the Rutile Filament . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 3.4.4 Time resolved X-ray Diffraction of VO2 Oscillators . . . . . . . 40 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 3.3 3.4 3.5 v Chapter 4 Vanadium Dioxide Tunnel Junctions 43 4.1 Introduction to tunneling in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 4.2 Device Fabrication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 4.3 Tunneling Modulation in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 4.3.1 Direct Tunneling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 4.3.2 Poole-Frenkel Conduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Conductive Atomic Force Microscopy of VO2 Tunnel Junctions . . . . 50 4.4.1 Experimental setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 4.4.2 Tunneling Current Modulation Across the MIT . . . . . . . . . 51 4.4.3 Modeling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 4.4 4.5 Chapter 5 Conclusion 57 5.1 Conclusions on VO2 Nanoscale Tunnel Junctions . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 5.2 Conclusions on Nanoscale Hard X-ray of the Electrically Driven Transition in VO2 5.3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Future Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Appendix A 2-Terminal Process Flow 60 Appendix B Nanoscale Tunnel Junction Process Flow vi 63 Bibliography 71 vii List of Figures 1.1 Thermal power dissipation of modern CPUs has stopped increasing and is about 100 W per chip. Adapted from [1] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.2 2 Illustration of an Id -Vg curve highlighting the importance of the switching slope to device performance for a fixed Ion /Iof f . The red curve shows a Boltzmann transport limited device, which requires the most gate voltage to saturate the device, the sub 60 mV/dec device achieves the same current for a lower gate voltage, translating into lower power usage. The ideal curve, shown in blue represents a device that turns on at the smallest possible finite gate bias. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.3 3 Illustration of a band diagrams showing the tunnel junction with a thin tunneling dielectric as the barrier material. (a) In the insulating state a bandgap forms in the MIT material making it impossible for electrons to directly tunnel, resulting in a high resistance state. (b) In the metallic state the bandgap collapses in the MIT material and electrons can tunnel into the empty states of the MIT material. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . viii 4 1.4 Metal insulator transition of various materials. The near room temperature transition and large change in resistivity makes VO2 an attractive material to prototype novel devices utilizing the MIT. VO2 bulk,[2] V2 O3 & V8 015 ,[3] VO,[4] V9 O17,[5] Ti2 O3 ,[6] NiSe,[7] EuO,[8] LSFO,[9] Ti3 O5 ,[10] NdNiO3 .[11] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.1 One dimensional periodic lattice of atoms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 2.2 One dimensional periodic lattice of atoms with pairing of atoms, also known as dimerization, leading to a doubling of the lattice parameter to 2a. This shifts the Brilluion zone to 2.3 π 2a . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 (a) E-K diagram for a half filled 1-D crystal of monovalent atoms, with a Brilluion zone at πa . (b) Dimerized crystal of 1-D monovalent atoms result in a new Brilluion zone at π . 2a The avoided crossing phenomenon at the Brilluion zone lowers the total electronic energy of the system. . . 2.4 13 Crystal structure of VO2 , showing only the vanadium ions, in (a) low temperature monoclinic phase, with dimerization and doubling of the unit cell, characteristic of Peierls transition and (b) high symmetry rutile phase with high conductivity. Modified from [12] . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.5 15 Experimental correlation between the effective Bohr radius and the critical carrier density of the Mott transition. The solid line represents n1/3 αo > 0.26. ’e-h’ refers to electron hole photo excitation. Adopted from [13] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.6 17 Illustration of the Mott-Hubbard model showing the U and t term acting on an electron trying to move from site i-1 to i to enter the 2nd state in the d orbital at i. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix 18 2.7 Schematic of the hall bar fabricated on VO2 . The hall effect measurements are performed while cooling from 330 K to 270 K across the MIT. 2.8 Resistivity vs. temperature of the 13 monolayer (3.9 nm) VO2 sample used in the hall measurements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.9 19 22 Hall measurements on VO2 (a) The Ns vs. T shows VO2 has an Ns of 1.01x1023 #/cm3 in the semiconducting state and 2.99x1018 #/cm3 in the metallic state, where the difference between the two states is about 3.4x104 x. (b)The µ vs. T shows a VO2 has a mobility of 9.36 cm2 /v − s in the semiconducting state and 0.46 cm2 /v − s in the metallic state, where the different between the two states is about 20x. . . . . . . . . . 3.1 23 Illustration explaining the derivation of the Bragg equation where the extra path length seen by the wave reflected from the 2nd layer is determined to be 2dsinθ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 25 (a) Illustrated cross section of the fabricated 2-terminal VO2 device. (b) SEM of the fabricated device, measured to be 6.0 µm long and 9.4 µm wide. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.3 27 Circuit diagram of the electrical biasing and measurement. A voltage is measured off a 38 kΩ load resistor Rload and voltage division is used to determine the voltage drop on the VO2 device under test. . . . . . . . . 3.4 29 θ/2θ scan at 260 K (red line) and 310 K (blue line) of the R 002 and M1 402̄ Bragg peaks, respectively. The expected position of the M2 040 Bragg peak is calculated to be 51.08 ◦ . A 2θ angle of 51.714 ◦ was chosen for the subsequent mapping to provide maximum contrast between the different VO2 phases. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . x 30 3.5 2D nanoscale X-ray maps of a VO2 device with applied voltages of (a) 0 V, (b) 8 V, (c) 10 V, and (d) 12 V and a series resistor of 38 kΩ which shows the dynamical growth of an R phase filament in the channel. Note in (a) that a remnant of the filament persisted when no voltage was applied across the channel. The white dashed lines represent the approximate edge of the gold electrodes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.6 33 (a) Voltage pulse applied to the VO2 and 38 kΩ resistor in series. (b) The corresponding time dependent X-ray intensity from the filament region and (c) resistance of the entire channel. The changes in the X-ray intensity accompanied by changes in channel resistance are attributed to a structural phase transition in the VO2 from the between the insulating M1 and metallic R phase. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.7 35 (a) Illustration of the equivalent circuit used to extract the filament width. (b) ρ vs. temperature for a thermally driven transition, showing a 571x change in resistivity. (c) The extracted resistivity when considering the whole 9.4 µm channel width results in a 17x change, if after 9.6 V only the 290 nm width that goes through a structural phase is considered full magnitude of the resistivity change is restored. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xi 37 3.8 (a) Circuit schematic overlaid on an illustration of the VO2 channel in LRS state with a resistor Rseries in series. (b) The filament width dependence on the series resistor. At higher currents (lower series resistance) the whole channel width can be utilized as seen by the data points falling on the dashed line, representing a 1:1 relationship between the extracted and patterned filament width. (c) The calculated filament width dependence on the current displays a linear relationship until joule heating increases resistivity, which is not accounted for in this model and incorrectly shows a reduction in filament width. 3.9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Time dependent X-ray diffraction of a VO2 oscillator. The increased XRD photons in the first 20 µs indicated a transition to the R phase has occurred. Within the first 40 µs the film transitions back into M1 for the remainder of the period of oscillation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 4.1 Illustrated cross-section of the fabricated nano-pillars. . . . . . . . . . . 44 4.2 (a) The OFF state occurs when VO2 is below the transition temperature, where a bandgap of 0.6 eV opens around the Fermi level creating a deficiency of states to tunnel into. Transport is by Poole-Frenkel conduction through trap states. (b) The ON state, when VO2 is below Tc , results in an MIM structure and direct tunneling contributions to the transport. This process enables conductance modulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3 4.4 46 (a) Band diagram of a symmetrical MIM structure in equilibrium. (b) Symmetrical MIM under bias, where V > φ0 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Schematic band diagram of Poole-Frenkel emission under bias. . . . . . 49 xii 4.5 (a) Scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the fabricated nano-pillar arrays. (b) Zoomed in SEM of an individual nano-pillar. (c) Topography scan of the area under investigation. The single pillars are clearly discernible. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.6 I-V traces for temperatures between 260 to 340 K in 5 K intervals as indicated by the legend for 3 individual pillars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.7 52 Conductance vs. temperature for 3 nano-pillars showing a tunneling conductance response to the abrupt MIT in VO2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.8 51 53 (a) Typical J-V off-state curve (pillar B 270 K) in the MIS case and the corresponding fit using Poole-Frenkel conduction. The inset shows a √ linear relationship of ln(I/V) vs. V , which is characteristic of PooleFrenkel conduction. (b) Typical J-V trace (pillar B from 330 K) of an on-state with the device in an MIM case, along with fitting showing the Poole-Frenkel (red curve) and direct tunneling (green curve) contribution; the total is shown in blue. The parameters used are detailed in table 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiii 55 List of Tables 3.1 Extracted R filament dimensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2 X-ray counts for 20 µs time bins starting at 0, 40, 80, and 120 µs after 37 the rising edge, labeled as B1-B4 respectively. No background subtraction is applied . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.1 41 Constants and fitting parameters used for direct tunneling and PooleFrenkel conduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . xiv 56 Acknowledgments I would like to dedicate this thesis to my parents, who always believed in me and supported my academic career and without their love this work would not be possible. Foremost, I would like to thank my adviser, Professor Suman Datta for giving me the opportunity to work on novel electronic materials. His enthusiasm, motivation and guidance throughout my research was invaluable. I would also like to thank Professor Srinivas Tadigadapa for serving on my Master’s committee and the use of his equipment. I am indebted to the great work by Hanjong Paik, Joshua Tashman and Professor Darrell Schlom of Cornell University for growing all the VO2 films used in this work. Thank you to Professor Roman Engel-Herbert for always guiding me in the right direction when I was lost. Special thanks to Nikhil Shukla and Ayan Kar for their many hours of fruitful discussions, support, friendship and good humor. Thank you to Greg Stone, Professor Venkatraman Gopalan, Martin Holt, Haiden Wen and Zhonghou Cai for their help with the x-ray analysis and measurements. Thank you to Magdalena Huefner and Professor Jennifer Hoffman of Harvard University, for their AFM measurements. This work would not have been possible without the assistance of Rajiv Misra, Jarrett Moyer and Professor Peter E. Schiffer from the Department of Physics at Penn State. I express my indebtedness to Rajiv for the Hall measurements and valuable discussions. A big thank you to all the members of the Nanoelecxv tronic Devices and Circuits Laboratory (NDCL) - Euichul Hwang, Mike Barth, Arun Thathachary, Matt Hollander, Ashish Agrawal, Nidhi Agrawal, Lu Liu, Bijesh Rajamohanan, Euichul Hwang, Ashkar Ali, Feng Li, Himanshu Madan, Dheeraj Mohata. xvi Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 Introduction to Metal Insulator Transition Based Tunnel Junctions Since the discovery of the solid state transistor in 1947 by Schockley, Bardeen and Brattain, the semiconductor industry has steadily scaled transistor size and as of 2013, logic chips with as many as 6.8 billion transistors, enough for nearly every human being on Earth, can be produced on a single chip.[14] As the transistor count has increased, the performance bottleneck has become power consumption [1] as shown in Fig. 1.1. Dynamic power consumption is proportional to CV2 , and until recently scaling has followed Dennard’s law,[15] which has reduced voltage by approximately 0.7x each generation. The vast majority of modern transistors are field effect transistors (FETs), which accomplish switching by adjusting a potential barrier trough the use of an electric field. However, the response of the carriers to the lowering of the barrier is limited by Boltzmann statistics where the increase in current by one decade is achieved by approximately 60 mV of barrier lowering at room temperature, effectively setting a minimum voltage 2 CPU Power (W) 1000 100 10 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Year Figure 1.1. Thermal power dissipation of modern CPUs has stopped increasing and is about 100 W per chip. Adapted from [1] for a desired Ion /Iof f ratio, disrupting Dennard’s predictions for voltage scaling. Novel device design and materials which exhibit non-Boltzmann limited transport are needed to realize super-steep slope (<60 mV/dec) transistors. The benefit of steep switching is made clear in Fig. 1.2 which shows how the same Ion /Iof f can be achieved at lower voltages, translating into power savings. Some of the alternatives being explored are spinFETs, MEMFETs, negative capacitance FETs, and tunnel FETs (TFETS), all of which show promise for high speed low power applications. The TFET relies on quantum tunneling phenomenon of electrons to travel through a barrier instead of having to surmount it, thereby overcoming the Boltzmann tyranny. The TFET has traditionally been realized through bandgap engineering of III-V materials, which offer a rich variety Log (ID) 3 Ideal Switch ~0mV/dec Steep Slope Transistor < 60mV/dec Boltzmann Limit 60mV/dec VG Figure 1.2. Illustration of an Id -Vg curve highlighting the importance of the switching slope to device performance for a fixed Ion /Iof f . The red curve shows a Boltzmann transport limited device, which requires the most gate voltage to saturate the device, the sub 60 mV/dec device achieves the same current for a lower gate voltage, translating into lower power usage. The ideal curve, shown in blue represents a device that turns on at the smallest possible finite gate bias. of bandgaps.[16] Recently sub 60 mV/dec switching has been achieved with TFETs.[17] However, III-V TFETs are hampered by low on-state current due to their low density of states. Recently, metal insulator transition (MIT) materials have been proposed as a selector for tunneling junctions.[18, 19] In the metallic state a large density of states would facility direct tunneling of carriers from a source electrode into the MIT material and exit through the drain electrode, passing through a conventional band insulator, resulting in a high conductivity on-state as illustrated in Fig. 1.3(a). In the insulating state a bandgap 4 Figure 1.3. Illustration of a band diagrams showing the tunnel junction with a thin tunneling dielectric as the barrier material. (a) In the insulating state a bandgap forms in the MIT material making it impossible for electrons to directly tunnel, resulting in a high resistance state. (b) In the metallic state the bandgap collapses in the MIT material and electrons can tunnel into the empty states of the MIT material. forming in the MIT material would make direct tunneling into the drain impossible, creating a low conductivity off state, as illustrated in the band diagram in Fig. 1.3(b). Conduction in the on-state is determined by the band insulator thickness, barrier height and density of states of the metal. Ideally, the off-state is determined by thermionic emission over the tunneling barrier. A third terminal, the gate, would externally control the state of the MIT material. Vanadium dioxide (VO2 ) is a material that exhibits a metal insulator transition with up to five orders of magnitude change in resistivity at 340 K in unstrained films.[2] The MIT can be externally triggered using thermal,[4] electronic,[20] optical[12] or strain stimuli.[21] While the exact origin of the transition is still under debate,[22] it has 5 been demonstrated to be as fast as 75 fs[12] by time resolved optical pumping. In the insulating state, VO2 has an optically measurable bandgap of 0.6 eV,[23] which abruptly collapses as it undergoes an insulator-to-metal transition. The collapse of the bandgap and ultra-fast switching holds promise for high speed correlated tunnel FETs.[19] When an MIT material is in the metallic state, the metal-insulator-MIT material structure forms a metal-insulator-metal (MIM) tunnel junction. In the insulating state the opening of a bandgap cuts off states for direct tunneling (JDT ) into the MIT material. Direct tunneling is expected to dominate MIM tunnel junctions but the absence of states near the Fermi level in the insulating state will drastically lower the tunneling current. In the insulating state, traps in the tunneling oxide would dominate transport through Poole-Frenkel (JP F ) conduction and other defect mediated transport. The modulation of density of states near the Fermi level leads to a high conductance state in the MIM case and low conductance when the bandgap forms, as illustrated in the band diagrams in Fig. 1.3 (a) and (b), respectively. This is fundamentally different from conventional semiconductor based tunnel junctions where the tunnel conductance is modulated by band-bending and Fermi level movement.[24] Metal-insulator-VO2 tunnel junctions were first demonstrated by Martens, et al., [18] on large area devices (200 µm & 300 µm diameter) and using hot (200 o C and higher) atomic layer deposition (ALD), resulting in approximately one order of magnitude conductance change when thermally driving across the transition. High temperature processing has been shown to create permanent metallic regions in VO2 , creating MIM shunting paths.[25] Large area device can be susceptible to shunting paths making it difficult to quantify the true potential of the transition. This thesis explores nanoscale tunnel junctions of 200 nm diameter with a low temperature ALD dielectric deposition process for the tunneling insulator. 6 1012 VO2 Bulk 1010 VO (001 TiO ) 2 ρ(Ω-cm) 8 10 V2O3 106 VO V8O15 104 V9O17 Ti2O3 This Work 2 10 2 NiSe EuO LSFO Ti3O5 100 10-2 NdNiO3 -4 10 10-6 0 200 400 600 800 Temperature (K) Figure 1.4. Metal insulator transition of various materials. The near room temperature transition and large change in resistivity makes VO2 an attractive material to prototype novel devices utilizing the MIT. VO2 bulk,[2] V2 O3 & V8 015 ,[3] VO,[4] V9 O17,[5] Ti2 O3 ,[6] NiSe,[7] EuO,[8] LSFO,[9] Ti3 O5 ,[10] NdNiO3 .[11] 1.2 Metal Insulator Transition in VO2 MIT is not unique to VO2 ; many other materials, especially vanadate based oxides offer a rich variety of transition temperatures, magnitudes and mechanisms. Fig. 1.4 is a plot of the resistivity change in a select set of transition metal oxides with MIT, highlighting their magnitudes and transition temperatures. The near room temperature accessibility and large change in magnitude for VO2 is one reason why it is used as a prototype MIT material. VO2 shows a complex interaction between the crystal structure and electronic prop- 7 erties. Depending on the temperature and strain, VO2 supports three stable states, two insulating monoclinic (M1 and M2) and a metallic rutile (R) phase, along with a metastable triclinic (T) phase and a complex triple point.[26] Several models have been proposed to explain the MIT in VO2 ,[27, 22, 28, 29, 30, 31] attributing it to varying levels of contribution from a Mott-Hubbard type phase transition and a Peierls-like structural instability. Significant research efforts are geared towards a better understanding of the phase transition mechanisms in VO2 to elucidate which description is most accurate. Recent work has provided evidence that an electrically driven MIT in VO2 can be achieved in the monoclinic phase without a change in the crystal symmetry, hinting at the possibility of an experimental observation of a Mott transition without a Peierls-like structural phase transition,[32] enabled by the Mott M2 phase.[33] Unlike a thermally driven MIT, the formation and growth of a filament plays an important role in an electrically driven MIT.[20, 34, 35, 36] However, no conclusive evidence exists regarding the underlying crystal structure of this filament. In this work, the structural properties of the filament created during an electrically driven MIT in VO2 thin films are investigated by nanoscale hard X-ray diffraction (XRD) spatial mapping. The structural evolution of the film and the geometric dimensions of the filament were measured as a function of the applied electric field. 1.2.1 VO2 Transition by External Stimuli The metal insulator transition in VO2 has been demonstrated using various external stimuli. As stated earlier, heating bulk unstrained VO2 film to 340 K results in an MIT. However, the speed of thermal stimulation is limited by thermal diffusivity and is not ideal for high speed operation. Electronic switching by applying a bias across VO2 is shown in this work and has been demonstrated by several other groups[37, 38], but Zim- 8 mers, et al.,[20] has shown that the cause of the effect is through Joule heating. High speed transitions with VO2 have been achieved by optical excitation showing ultra-fast sub 75 fs transition speeds[12], which causes the destabilization of the V dimers.[39, 40] Recently, Jeong et al. have shown MIT control in VO2 using ionic liquids, however they concluded that the effect was not due to electrostatically induced carriers, but rather to field induced oxygen vacancy migration.[41] Strain induced transitions have also been demonstrated,[21] but a transduction FET using VO2 has yet to be achieved experimentally. 1.3 Thesis Outline This thesis aims to investigate a novel using MIT based tunneling phenomenon in VO2 and the structural evolution of the electrically driven MIT in VO2 . This work develops a thorough understanding of the transport mechanisms in VO2 based tunnel junctions across the abrupt metal insulator transition. Nanoscale VO2 tunnel junctions with 100x modulation of tunneling current across the metal insulator transition are presented, and the transport is modeled. Additionally, structural evolution of the MIT in VO2 during an electrically driven transition is determined by nanoscale hard X-ray. The formation of nanoscale R filaments in VO2 during an electrically driven transition are explored the dynamic nature of these filaments as a function of device load are quantified. furthermore, the time dependent structural evolution of a VO2 oscillator is investigated using time resolved X-ray diffraction. This thesis will be organized in the following way. Chapter 2 will develop the current understanding of MIT in VO2 . The theoretical picture of the Peierls and Mott-Hubbard based metal insulator transitions are discussed. Recent experimental evidence of both types of transitions in VO2 is presented and discussed. 9 In chapter 3, the mechanism for a MIT based tunneling junction is proposed. The results of VO2 based nanoscale tunnel junctions using a low temperature ALD process are presented and modeled using direct tunneling and Poole-Frenkel conduction. In chapter 4, a novel experimental procedure detailing how to probe the local structural transition is discussed and a method to differentiate M1, M2 and R crystal structures in VO2 is presented. Next, the nanoscale rutile filaments observed using X-ray diffraction are quantified and their dynamic nature is explored. Additionally, the time dependent structural evolution of a VO2 oscillator is presented and discussed. Finally, in chapter 5, The key conclusions from the tunneling transport and nanoscale X-ray work are summarized and suggestions for future studies are discussed. Chapter 2 Metal Insulator Transition Theory 2.1 Introduction In this chapter, the theoretical explanation for the metal insulator transition is introduced using the Peierls and Mott-Hubbard model. Hall effect measurements are performed on VO2 to quantify the free carrier concentration and mobility across the MIT. The current state of research offering evidence for a Peierls or Mott-Hubbard transition is reviewed. 2.2 The Peierls Transition The origin of the Peierls transition can be understood by first considering the origin of the bandgap in a periodic lattice and then showing how dimerizing pairs of ions can lead to lower energies and the complete filling of a band, leading to an insulator. Finally, experimental evidence of the Peierls model in VO2 are discussed. 11 (a) atom a Figure 2.1. One dimensional periodic lattice of atoms. 2.2.1 Standing waves in a periodic potential The free electron wave function (r) = exp(ik · r) (2.1) and the energy dispersion Ek = ~2 k 2 2m (2.2) describe plane waves in space. Where k is the wave vector, ~ is Plancks constant, and m is the effective mass. Now consider a one dimensional periodic potential applied to these plane waves, such as those formed by atoms in a crystal lattice as shown in Fig. 2.1. From the Bragg diffraction condition (k+G)=k2 , where G is the reciprocal lattice vector of the lattice, k is wavevector of the incident beam and k is the magnitude. For one dimension this becomes 1 k = ± G = ±nπ/a 2 (2.3) leading one to conclude that reflections and the potential for an energy gap occur at the following wavevectors k = ±nπ/a (2.4) 12 2a Figure 2.2. One dimensional periodic lattice of atoms with pairing of atoms, also known as dimerization, leading to a doubling of the lattice parameter to 2a. This shifts the Brilluion zone π to 2a where n is an integer, where n=1 is the first Brilluion zone. At π a periods of k the wave functions are made up of waves that are Bragg reflected at each Brilluion zone and cannot travel left or right, therefor becoming standing waves. From this understanding the Bloch function and the Kronig-Penney model can be used to determine the wave equation in a periodic lattice. However for the purpose of explaining Peierls transitions we only need to understand that the bandgap forms at k = ± πa . 2.2.2 Metal Insulator Transition by Ion Dimerization If a crystal lattice forms pairs of ions, which effectively doubles the lattice spacing as shown in Fig. 2.2 it can be shown that the energy of the system is minimized because electrons move to a lower energy state. An electron has two spin states, this implies that an ideal one dimensional crystal with divalent atoms will just fill the lowest band with electrons. The states are completely filled and an electric field will not move the electrons, creating an insulator. If a monovalent atom is used the band only half fills, allowing for electrons to move to empty states with the application of an electric field, creating a metal. For the half filled metal case the dispersion curve is filled up to π , 2a half of the available momentum space as shown by the illustration in Fig. 2.3(a) for a crystal of period a. If the ions were to pair up and double the lattice spacing as described previously in Fig. 2.2 the bandgap would move to π 2a creating a fully filled lower band as shown in Fig. 2.3(b). This phenomenon 13 (a) (b) Energy Energy EF EF -π/a π/a Wavevector -π/a π/2a π/2a π/a Wavevector Figure 2.3. (a) E-K diagram for a half filled 1-D crystal of monovalent atoms, with a Brilluion π zone at πa . (b) Dimerized crystal of 1-D monovalent atoms result in a new Brilluion zone at 2a . The avoided crossing phenomenon at the Brilluion zone lowers the total electronic energy of the system. where the Brilluion zone and the Fermi surface lineup is known as Fermi surface nesting. The lowering in energy comes from the fact that at dispersion at the Brilluion zone exhibits the avoided crossing phenomenon, where the upper and lower energy bands will not cross at the Brilluion zone. The energy near the zone boundary may be estimated by the equation below 2 λg/2 ~2 G ~2 K 2 E' ±U + 1±2 2m 2 2m U (2.5) where G is the reciprocal lattice vector, U is the potential energy of the periodic potential, λ = ~2 K 2 2m and K̃ = k − 21 G. The temperature plays a role in the transition because below the Peierls transition temperature the Fermi tail is reduced to a point where the reduction in electronic energy 14 from the transition exceeds the increase in crystal energy to dimerize the ions and move the Brilluion zone to π 2a level of the filled band at where the avoided crossing phenomenon results in the Fermi π , 2a from the new a 2 lattice spacing, to be lower than the original undistorted lattice spacing of a. 2.2.3 Evidence of Peierls Transition in VO2 The most striking evidence of a Peierls transition in VO2 is the crystal structure. The low temperature, insulating monoclinic (M1) phase illustrated in 2.4(a) has a dimerization of the quasi 1-D lattice of vanadium atoms and a doubling of the unit cell from the high temperature, metallic rutile phase illustrated in 2.4(b). Density function calculations using the local density approximation method reveal a Peierls-like instability of the d|| band is the cause of the insulating M1 phase,[27] but the opening of the bandgap was not as large as experimentally observed. Ultra-fast pump-probe spectroscopy has suggested that a structural bottleneck of 75 fs exists in VO2 when going from insulator to metal suggesting the structure plays a critical role in forming the metallic state. [12] 15 (a) (b) Dimerization Low T - Monoclinic High T - Rutile Figure 2.4. Crystal structure of VO2 , showing only the vanadium ions, in (a) low temperature monoclinic phase, with dimerization and doubling of the unit cell, characteristic of Peierls transition and (b) high symmetry rutile phase with high conductivity. Modified from [12] 2.3 2.3.1 The Mott-Hubbard Transition Correlated Electrons and Localization In 1938 Wigner suggested that an electron gas of low concentration might crystalize or become localized.[42] An electron and a positive ion will attract each other with a columbic force described by the equation below.[43] e1 e2 kr2 (2.6) Where r is the distance between the charges, e1 and e2 are the charge of the respective 16 ions, and k = 4πεo , where εo is the dielectric constant of free space. At absolute zero such a system cannot carry a current due to localization of the electron to the ion. However, if there is a significant concentration of free carriers injected into the system the columbic force is described by −e2 exp(−qr) kr (2.7) Where q is a screening constant described by the Thomas-Fermi approximation shown below. q2 = 4me2 n1/3 k~2 (2.8) e is the elementary charge of an electron, m is the mass of an electron, n is the carrier concentration, and ~ is Plancks constant. Mott predicted that in such a system if enough free carriers are injected there will be a discontinuous transition from insulating to a metallic state.[44] The effect is discontinuous because as some electrons escape from their pairs, they further increase the screening and free other carriers in an avalanche process. Mott also proposed an estimate of the critical carrier concentration for which this transition occurs. Friedel describes a condition for which pairing will not occur as (2.9). q> k~2 me2 −1 (2.9) Substituting the Thomas-Fermi screening constant (2.8) into (2.9), results in the Mott criterion n1/3 αo > 0.25 Where αo = k~2 /me2 , also known as the Bohr radius. (2.10) 17 Figure 2.5. Experimental correlation between the effective Bohr radius and the critical carrier density of the Mott transition. The solid line represents n1/3 αo > 0.26. ’e-h’ refers to electron hole photo excitation. Adopted from [13] This critical density of carriers has been used very successfully to describe the Mott transition in a wide variety of materials such as Ge, Si, CdS, NH3 and Ar [13] as seen in Fig. 2.5. The Mott model can be extended to a case of repelling electrons causing localization. The Mott-Hubbard model describes such a situation, where strong columbic interactions between neighboring atoms create a repealing force that prevents conduction and local- 18 d1-1 d1 Electron i-2 t d1+1 d1 d1 i Site i+1 i+2 U i-1 Figure 2.6. Illustration of the Mott-Hubbard model showing the U and t term acting on an electron trying to move from site i-1 to i to enter the 2nd state in the d orbital at i. izes electrons. Now, consider an ion with one filled state, there exists an energy costs to fill the 2nd state due to columbic repulsion from the filled state as illustrated in Fig. 2.6. The relationship is described by the Mott-Hubbard Hamiltonian H = −t X hijiσ C † jσ Ciσ + U X ni↑ ni↓ (2.11) i Where the t term is the hopping amplitude, which describes band overlap between states (the energy available to hop from site to site), the U term is the columbic interaction term (onsite repulsive energy). C † jσ and Ciσ are annihilation and creation operators respectively, and ni↓ and ni↑ are density of state operators for the sites.If the hopping term is >> than the interaction term, electrons will be free to move from site to site and metallic behavior is observed; If the hopping term is << than the interaction term, insulating behavior is observed. 2.3.2 Evidence of Mott-Hubbard Transition in VO2 Spectroscopic ellipsometry on VO2 reveals a strong electron-electron correlation in the metallic phase.[45] Also, a divergent effective mass at the transition point is associated with strong electron-electron correlation.[46] Some have speculated that VO2 exhibits 19 (3) (1) W =50μm Contacts (1) (4) L = 400μm (5) (2) (6) Figure 2.7. Schematic of the hall bar fabricated on VO2 . The hall effect measurements are performed while cooling from 330 K to 270 K across the MIT. a Peierls assisted Mott transition where a Peierls instability enhances columbic interactions leading to a reduced energy state, instead of the traditional Fermi-surface nesting process described in. 2.2.2 2.4 The Hall Effect in VO2 The hall effect is a common technique used for determining free carrier concentration (Ns ), carrier type (n or p) mobility (µ) and sheet resistance (Rs ). A typical hall bar structure is illustrated Fig. 2.7 with the electrodes labeled 1-6. Other hall structures which use from 4 to 8 electrodes are also commonly used.[47] 20 2.4.1 The Hall Effect The parameters are determined from two sets of measurements. The Rs is determined by using the electrodes in a 4pt probe configuration and evaluating the following equation Rsh = V34 W LI12 (2.12) Where V34 is the differential voltage from electrode 3 and 4, W is the width of the hall bar, L is the distance between electrode 3 and 4. The Ns , carrier type and µ are determined by measuring the transverse voltage between electrodes 3 and 5 or 4 and 6 (it is common for an average between the two to be taken, also known as the hall voltage Vhall for an applied current I12 and a perpendicular magnetic field B. The carrier type is extracted from the sign of the hall voltage. Ns is determined from the equation below Ns = − IB Vhall q (2.13) Once Ns is known µ is calculated from µ= 1 qNs Rsh (2.14) Where, q is the elementary charge of an electron. 2.4.2 Hall Measurements in VO2 To fabricate the hall devices, Pd/Au electrodes are deposited and patterned by lift-off. A bar of VO2 is isolated using a CF4 etch as illustrated in 2.7. The hall voltage is collected from magnetic fields ranging from ± 40 kG while cooling from 330 to 270 K in 10 K steps. 21 First, resistivity vs. temperature is measured in using 4pt. probe in a Van der Pauw configuration and the resistivity is determined for each temperature. The change is resistivity is determined to be 1480X as shown in Fig. 2.8 and the transition temperature is approximately 298 K when heating and 286 K when cooling. The hall voltage is found to be negative and therefor the dominant carrier is n-type. Cooling from metallic to insulating state reduces the carrier concentration by about 3.3x104 x, as seen in Fig. 2.9(a), from 1.01x1023 ± 1.74x1022 #/cm3 to 2.99x1018 ± 4.32x1017 #/cm3 . During this cooling the mobility increased by approximately 20x from 0.46 ± 0.097 cm2 /v − s to 9.36 ± 0.035 cm2 /v − s, as seen in Fig. 2.9(b). The combination of these two results in a resistivity change of 1666x, close to the 1480x measured by Van Der Pauw method. The abrupt change in resistivity observed in VO2 is dominated by the abrupt change in carrier concentration and to the 2nd order, a change in mobility. 22 0 10 ρ ( Ω−cm ) -1 10 -2 10 Cooling Heating -3 10 -4 10 180 210 240 270 300 330 Temperature (K) 360 Figure 2.8. Resistivity vs. temperature of the 13 monolayer (3.9 nm) VO2 sample used in the hall measurements. 23 (a) 3 Carrier Density (#/cm ) 1E23 1E22 1E21 1E20 1E19 1E18 (b) 260 280 300 320 Temperature(K) 340 260 280 340 8 2 Mobility (cm /V-s) 10 6 4 2 0 300 320 Temperature(K) Figure 2.9. Hall measurements on VO2 (a) The Ns vs. T shows VO2 has an Ns of 1.01x1023 #/cm3 in the semiconducting state and 2.99x1018 #/cm3 in the metallic state, where the difference between the two states is about 3.4x104 x. (b)The µ vs. T shows a VO2 has a mobility of 9.36 cm2 /v − s in the semiconducting state and 0.46 cm2 /v − s in the metallic state, where the different between the two states is about 20x. Chapter 3 Nanoscale Structural Evolution of the Electrically Driven Transition in Vanadium Dioxide 3.1 Introduction In this chapter the mechanism behind the electrically driven insulator to metal transition in two terminal VO2 is investigated by analyzing local phase formation by nanoscale hard X-ray diffraction. First, Bragg diffraction theory and the diffraction condition are introduced. Next the experimental design which allows for probing of VO2 phases M1, M2 and R is discussed. Conducting R filaments are observed by X-ray probing and their contribution to the channel conductance is quantified. The differences between an electrical and thermally induced, magnitude of transition are explained using a network of resistors to model filamentary conduction in VO2 . Further analysis reveals how the VO2 can be biased to tune M1/R phase co-existence which can have important implications on circuit designs. Finally, the structural evolution of a VO2 oscillator is revealed by 25 d atom Figure 3.1. Illustration explaining the derivation of the Bragg equation where the extra path length seen by the wave reflected from the 2nd layer is determined to be 2dsinθ time resolved X-ray diffraction. 3.2 Bragg’s Law of Diffraction Waves reflecting off periodic planes will have different path lengths. Only certain path lengths that are integer multiples of the incident wavelength will have constructive interference. For a fixed wavelength, the constructive interference is achieved by meeting the condition 2d sin θ = nλ (3.1) where θ is the incident angle, d is the distance between periodic planes, λ is the wavelength, and n is an integer. The derivation of 3.1 can be understood from Fig. 3.1, where the 2d sin θ is the extra distance the wave travels as it reflects off the 2nd periodic layer. 26 3.2.1 Structure Factor In a 3-D crystal not all planes will give constructive interference. To determine which planes meet the diffraction condition the structure factor of the basis (SG ) is calculated for the space group of the crystal by the equation below SG = X fj exp [−i2π(ν1 xj + +ν2 yj + ν3 zj )] (3.2) j where x,y,z are the normalized locations of the atom in the unit cell and ν1 ,ν2 ,ν3 define the crystal plane. A null SG indicates destructive interference. The diffraction amplitude is directly proportional to SG and as expected the case for destructive interference produces no diffraction peak. 3.3 3.3.1 Experimental Setup Two Terminal VO2 Fabrication The VO2 films under investigation were 10-nm-thick grown epitaxially on semi-insulating TiO2 (001) substrates employing reactive oxide molecular beam epitaxy using a Veeco GEN10 system. The lattice mismatch of 0.86% effectively shortens the c-axis of VO2 oriented normal to the film surface.[48] Two-terminal test structures were fabricated using standard lithographic techniques. Electrical contacts were patterned on the VO2 surface using electron beam lithography and a 20-nm-thick Pd/80-nm-thick Au metal stack was deposited in the defined patterns by electron beam evaporation, followed by lift-off. The active channel and device isolation was then patterned by electron beam lithography followed by a CF4 dry etch and residual e-beam resist was stripped with a 70 ◦ C bath of Remover 1165. A cross of the final device structure is illustrated in 27 (a) 80nm Au 80nm Au 20nm Pd 20nm Pd 10 nm VO2 500 µm TiO2 (001) (b) Figure 3.2. (a) Illustrated cross section of the fabricated 2-terminal VO2 device. (b) SEM of the fabricated device, measured to be 6.0 µm long and 9.4 µm wide. Fig. 3.2(a). Step by step details of the process is described in Appendix A. Finally, the sample is mounted on a ceramic package and the electrodes from the sample are wire-bonded to external leads. A scanning electron micrograph of the device probed by XRD, which is 6 µm long, 9.4 µm wide, is shown in Fig. 3.2(b). 28 3.3.2 Nanoscale hard X-ray Setup The structure of the VO2 film as it transformed from the HRS to LRS was investigated using the nanoscale scanning X-ray probe at the 2-ID-D beamline at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory. A 10.1 keV hard X-ray probe with a spot size as small as 250 nm full-width-half-maximum was achieved by an Au Fresnel zone plate (1.6 µm thick, 160 µm diameter, 100 nm outer most zone width, 40 µm center disk, 40 µm central beam stop) in conjunction with a 20 µm order sorting aperture. Twodimensional (2D) structural maps of a VO2 channel were obtained by raster scanning the device under the X-ray probe at a fixed θ/2θ angle while simultaneously monitoring the intensity of the diffracted beam using a single avalanche photodiode detector as a function of applied voltages across the device. A liquid nitrogen cryostream (Oxford UMC0060) was used to maintain the sample at the desired temperature. For beam intensities above 1 MW/m2 it was found that the X-ray caused a permanent transition into the M1 phase. The MIT control in VO2 with high energy radiation has been observed by other groups.[49] The exact X-ray beam intensity threshold and mechanism of this phenomenon is still being investigated. In our case, a lower intensity of 750 W/m2 was achieved by inserting attenuation filters into the X-ray beam prior to the zone plate and defocusing the beam to a 1 µm diameter spot size on the sample. The device channel was scanned using 500 nm steps along the length of the channel (in the direction of the applied electric field) and in 300 nm steps along the width (transverse to the applied electric field), providing information in the nanoscale regime. The electrical measurements and biasing were made by connecting the leads of the package to an Agilent 81150A arbitrary waveform generator and an Textronix DPO3034 oscilloscope in 1 MΩ impedance mode is used to measure the applied voltage. A 38 kΩ resistor is placed in series with the device to prevent permanent damage to the film 29 VO2 DUT Rload=38 kΩ RScope 1 MΩ RScope 1 MΩ Figure 3.3. Circuit diagram of the electrical biasing and measurement. A voltage is measured off a 38 kΩ load resistor Rload and voltage division is used to determine the voltage drop on the VO2 device under test. during the electrically induced transition and the voltage is read off the series resistor as illustrated by the circuit diagram in Fig. 3.3. At 260 K the device with the series resistor is found to transition from a high resistance state (HRS) to a low resistance state (LRS) at 9.6 V. Figure 3.4 shows the R 002 and M1 402̄ Bragg peaks measured at 310 K and 260 K, respectively, on the VO2 thin film, along with the expected location of the M2 040 peak. Due to the metastable nature of the triclinic phase, it is not considered in this analysis. A 2θ angle of 51.714 ◦ was selected to provide the maximum intensity contrast between the M1 and R phases. At this angle an increase in intensity indicates the presence of the R phase while a decrease would signify the presence of the M2 phase, which may appear 30 Normalized Intensity 6 260 K (Insulating/M1) 310 K (Metallic/R) Detector Position 2θ = 51.714 ° 5 R = 4.4 4 3 Expected M2 Peak = 51.08 ° 2 M1 = 1.0 1 0 50.5 51.0 51.5 52.0 52.5 2θ (°) Figure 3.4. θ/2θ scan at 260 K (red line) and 310 K (blue line) of the R 002 and M1 402̄ Bragg peaks, respectively. The expected position of the M2 040 Bragg peak is calculated to be 51.08 ◦ . A 2θ angle of 51.714 ◦ was chosen for the subsequent mapping to provide maximum contrast between the different VO2 phases. in an electrically driven MIT. Although, thermally driving the film across the transition while scanning θ/2θ did not reveal any evidence of an M2 phase, in agreement with the recently published VO2 temperature-stress phase diagram.[26] 3.4 3.4.1 Nanoscale X-ray Diffraction Spatially Resolved Nanoscale X-ray diffraction Nanoscale XRD maps were collected for a range of applied voltages both above and below the electronically driven MIT. Figure 3.5 shows the intensity maps for the device at 260 K, for 0, 8, 10, and 12 V bias applied to the VO2 device and 38 kΩ series resistor. To highlight the structural changes from the M1 phase for different applied voltages, 31 the intensity of the XRD maps was normalized with respect to the M1 intensity. In Fig. 3.5, the green regions are diffraction signals from the M1 phase of VO2 , blue is where the VO2 etched out, and red areas represent R domains. Figure 3.5(a) shows that the VO2 channel was mainly in the M1 phase (HRS) under zero bias condition except for a small R filament at the center of the channel. This filament is likely a remnant from previous electrically driven transitions (i.e. memory effect); however, repeatedly cycling the device across the MIT and rescanning the channel did not always result in an observable remnant filament. At 0 V, the total channel resistance was 95.6 kΩ and the device was in HRS. The small R filament did not significantly contribute to the in-plane conduction, but can act as a shunting path for out of plane transport for vertical devices. For 8 V bias, a larger filament, approximately 3.2 µm long, was observed at the center, but did not bridge the entire channel, shown in Fig. 3.5(b). This filament at 8 V reduced the channel resistance by about half to 49.0 kΩ and forms before the device transitions to a LRS. Increasing the bias to 10 V, the VO2 channel underwent an electrically driven transition into the LRS and channel resistance dropped sharply to 5.9 kΩ. Figure 3.5(c) shows that in this state, the filament bridged the entire length of the 6 µm channel; however its width is only a fraction of the lithographically defined 9.4 µm channel width. Finally, at 12 V applied voltage, the channel resistance was 5.5 kΩ, a 17x decrease from the equilibrium state at 0 V. The filament seen in Fig. 3.5(d) had a slightly increased width compared to the 10 V bias. At 12 V bias the peak XRD intensity from the filament region was found to be only 2.1x (2.0x at 10 V bias) that of M1, which is significantly lower than the 4.4x expected increase observed in the bulk film for a thermally driven MIT. Assuming uniform X-ray illumination, this suggests that the filament occupied approximately 1/3 of the full 1 µm diameter beam size, indicating a filament width of approximately 300 nm. Additionally, no drop in intensity was observed in the channel that could be attributed to an M2 phase; as mentioned before this was expected from a 32 tensile strained VO2 film such as the one used in this experiment. 33 R=95.6 kΩ 0V Normalized Intensity (a) 6 4 2 0 Length (µm) (b) 8V R=49.0 kΩ 10 V R=5.9 kΩ 12 V R=5.5 kΩ 6 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 4 2 0 (c) 6 4 2 0 (d) 6 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 Width (µm) Figure 3.5. 2D nanoscale X-ray maps of a VO2 device with applied voltages of (a) 0 V, (b) 8 V, (c) 10 V, and (d) 12 V and a series resistor of 38 kΩ which shows the dynamical growth of an R phase filament in the channel. Note in (a) that a remnant of the filament persisted when no voltage was applied across the channel. The white dashed lines represent the approximate edge of the gold electrodes. 34 To confirm that the increased XRD intensity response was due to the MIT and to demonstrate repeatability, the diffraction intensity and the VO2 resistance were simultaneously measured over several cycles of electrically induced transitions. A pulse train, shown in Fig. 3.6(a), was cycled from 1.3 V to 10 V, as 9.6 V was found to be sufficient to induce the electronic transition, while 1.3 V was low enough to return to an insulating state yet provide a finite current to confirm the resistance of the VO2 . The X-ray beam was focused on the conducting filament and the diffracted intensity was collected while simultaneously monitoring the channel resistance. Figure 3.6(b-c) shows that the LRS coincided with an increased intensity attributed to the R phase, whereas the HRS coincided with the M1 phase. 35 0 12 20 30 40 50 60 70 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Vsource(V) (a) 8 4 0 Normalized Intensity 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 (b) R 5 RVO2(Ω) 10 M1 (c) 10 4 10 3 10 0 Time (s) Figure 3.6. (a) Voltage pulse applied to the VO2 and 38 kΩ resistor in series. (b) The corresponding time dependent X-ray intensity from the filament region and (c) resistance of the entire channel. The changes in the X-ray intensity accompanied by changes in channel resistance are attributed to a structural phase transition in the VO2 from the between the insulating M1 and metallic R phase. 3.4.2 Filament Size Extraction To explain the difference in the channel resistivity change between the thermal (571x) and electrically (17x) driven transitions, the total resistance was calculated by incorporating the coexistence of low and high resistive phases. The channel was treated as a set of series and parallel resistors with the equivalent circuit diagram given in Fig. 3.7(a), overlaid on an illustration of an M1 channel with a rutile filament in the center. 36 The total resistance of the equivalent circuit is given in Eq. (3.3) where Rpara−R is the parallel resistor describing the rutile filament, Rseries−M and Rpara−M are resistors with the resistivity characteristic of the monoclinic phase. Rseries−M components were combined into a single series resistor and similarly the Rpara−M components were lumped into a single parallel resistor. ρM and ρR are the resistivities of the monoclinic and rutile phases, respectively; while L, W and t are the length, width and thickness of the respective region. The regions were assumed to be uniform throughout the entire film thickness. The length of the filament was estimated from the 2D-XRD maps and the width of the filament was calculated by solving for Wpara−R in Eq. (3.3) for a ρM and ρR of 0.16 Ω-cm and 2.8x10−4 Ω-cm, respectively, as determined from the ρ vs. T curve in Fig 3.7(b). RV O2 = Rseries−M + (Rpara−R ||Rpara−M ) " ρR Lpara−R ρM Lpara−M # RV O2 = ρM Lseries−M Wseries−M t + Wpara−R t ρR Lpara−R Wpara−R t Wpara−M t (3.3) ρM Lpara−M + W t para−M When the transition to LRS occurs, the R filament length was set to the channel length and the Rseries−M term goes to zero. At 10 and 12 V a filament width of 270 and 290 nm was determined, respectively; in excellent agreement with the experimental estimation of approximately 300 nm from the XRD intensity maps. A summary of the filament dimensions extracted from the X-ray imaging and Eq. (3.3) is shown in Table 3.1. Figure 3.7(c) plots the extracted resistivity of the entire channel during an electrically driven transition. However, if considering only the 290 nm wide R-phase, the entire 571x resistivity change can be observed. These results emphasize the importance of understanding and quantifying the presence and dimensions of R filaments in the channel. 37 Drain Rseries-M 1 Rpara-M Rpara-M= Rpara-R = (a) Rutile Filament Rseries-M= Source (c) (b) ρ (Ω-cm) 0.1 17x 0.01 571x 571x 1E-3 Width = 9.4 μm Width = 290 nm Cooling Heating 1E-4 240 260 280 300 320 340 0 2 Temperature (K) 4 6 8 10 12 Voltage (V) Figure 3.7. (a) Illustration of the equivalent circuit used to extract the filament width. (b) ρ vs. temperature for a thermally driven transition, showing a 571x change in resistivity. (c) The extracted resistivity when considering the whole 9.4 µm channel width results in a 17x change, if after 9.6 V only the 290 nm width that goes through a structural phase is considered full magnitude of the resistivity change is restored. Table 3.1. Extracted R filament dimensions V 0 8 10 12 R Length (µm) 0.5 3.2 6.0 6.0 R Width (nm) 50 200 270 290 I (µA) 92.0 227.8 275.9 RV O2 (kΩ) 95.6 49.0 5.9 5.5 38 3.4.3 Dynamics of the Rutile Filament VO2 has recently been demonstrated as an effective switching element in high density memory cells.[50] The memory cell exists as high or low load resistance, depending on its digital state, and understanding the role of R filament formation is critical for realizing ideal volume, write speeds, and performance for such a device. To quantify the effect of load resistance on VO2 channel utilization, resistors from 3 k to 38 kΩ were placed in series with a 6 µm long channel of varying widths from 4 to 20 µm as illustrated in Fig. 3.8(a). The devices were biased in the LRS at a fixed voltage (18 V) to ensure that the rutile filament length is fixed at the channel length (6 µm), so that the width can be extracted. The filament width was a function of series resistance, see Fig. 3.8(b). The device can be biased in such a way that either phase coexistence in the VO2 channel or a complete transformation of the entire channel to the R phase is achieved. For the 3 kΩ load, a channel width up to approximately 17 µm can be fully utilized. By increasing the series resistance the decreasing current flow results in a smaller filament. This shows that for some given load resistance a further increase in VO2 channel width does not significantly decrease LRS resistance of the VO2 . As shown in Fig. 3.8(c) the filament of a 4 µm wide device in the LRS state is linearly proportional to the current until it becomes comparable to the patterned width of the device (shown as a dashed line). After which, Joule heating increases the resistivity of the metallic R channel and the extraction method (which assumes a fixed rutile resistivity) incorrectly shows the filament width as decreasing. 39 (b) Filament Width, Wpara-R (µm) (a) 25 Rseries 1:1 3 kΩ 5 kΩ 8 kΩ 20 15 10 kΩ 17 kΩ 27 kΩ 38 kΩ 10 5 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 Patterned Channel Width (µm) (c) Filament Width (µm) 4 3 2 ρr increase from Joule heating 1 0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 Current (mA) Figure 3.8. (a) Circuit schematic overlaid on an illustration of the VO2 channel in LRS state with a resistor Rseries in series. (b) The filament width dependence on the series resistor. At higher currents (lower series resistance) the whole channel width can be utilized as seen by the data points falling on the dashed line, representing a 1:1 relationship between the extracted and patterned filament width. (c) The calculated filament width dependence on the current displays a linear relationship until joule heating increases resistivity, which is not accounted for in this model and incorrectly shows a reduction in filament width. 40 3.4.4 Time resolved X-ray Diffraction of VO2 Oscillators A VO2 channel may be biased by a DC voltage to produce oscillatory behavior.[35, 51] To investigate the structural dynamics of VO2 oscillators the channel used in the local structural mapping experiment described earlier is cooled to 255 K and 67.6 kΩ resistor is placed in series. The oscilloscope is set to produce an external trigger to a delay generator (SRS DG535) on each rising edge. Variations in the VO2 oscillation frequency requires that the delay generator is synchronized to each rising edge to ensure the same time period is measured after each oscillation. The delay generator is programmed to produce four 20 µs square pulses with 40 µs periods. This creates 20 µs time bins starting at 0, 40, 80, and 120 µs after the rising edge, labeled as B1-B4 respectively. The X-ray beam is positioned on the filament and the channel is biased to produce sustained oscillations. The diffracted photon counts are integrated for 300 seconds. The waveform of a typical oscillation is shown in Fig. 3.9, where the left axis is the voltage on the load resistor. 41 20 1000 B1 R 800 Vload(V) 600 10 400 5 0 0.0 200 Counts (Arb. Units) 15 M1 B2 B3 B4 0 100.0µ 200.0µ 300.0µ Time (s) Figure 3.9. Time dependent X-ray diffraction of a VO2 oscillator. The increased XRD photons in the first 20 µs indicated a transition to the R phase has occurred. Within the first 40 µs the film transitions back into M1 for the remainder of the period of oscillation. Superimposed on the waveform are the total XRD photon counts, shown on the right axis, for each of the 4 bins plotted relative to the rising edge. The total counts for each bin, seen in table 3.2, show a 50% higher photon count in B1 than B2-4, providing evidence of an R phase formation after the rising edge. The three subsequent bins B2B4 are approximately equal and significantly lower than B1, indicating M1 phase for the Bin B1 B2 B3 B4 Counts (Arb. Units) 917 605 595 552 Table 3.2. X-ray counts for 20 µs time bins starting at 0, 40, 80, and 120 µs after the rising edge, labeled as B1-B4 respectively. No background subtraction is applied 42 majority of the oscillation. If the X-ray beam is positioned away from the filament, but still on the channel and the experiment is repeated B1-B4 are all approximately equal. This suggests that the filament observed in the electrically induced switching described earlier in section 3.4.1 is repeatedly reformed and broken during each VO2 oscillation, and structural phase transition from M1 to R and back to M1 plays an integral role in the oscillations. 3.5 Conclusion In-situ nanoscale X-ray mapping with resistivity measurements on VO2 have revealed the formation of an R metallic filament in an insulating M1 film during an electrically driven MIT. Additionally, time resolved XRD revealed that the filament observed in the electrically induced switching is repeatedly reformed and broken in VO2 oscillators, and structural phase transition from M1 to R and back to M1 plays an integral role in the oscillations. This work also demonstrates that nanoscale R filaments comprising only a small portion of the total device area can exist in the VO2 channel below biases required to switch to LRS, highlighting the importance of enhancing spatial resolution for the study of electrically driven phase transitions. The extracted filament size revealed that, depending on the load, the ratio of R/M1 phase can be externally controlled, which can have important implications on circuit designs using VO2 to drive resistive loads. Chapter 4 Vanadium Dioxide Tunnel Junctions 4.1 Introduction to tunneling in VO2 In this chapter we investigate the tunneling transport of VO2 nanoscale junctions across a thermally induced phase transition. First, the mechanism for tunneling current modulation as the VO2 undergoes a MIT transition is explained. Next, the fabrication process using a low temperature ALD is described. Experimental results showing two orders of magnitude change in tunnel conductance in metal-insulator-VO2 tunnel junctions are discussed and the large conductance change is presented and modeled using direct tunneling and Poole-Frenkel conduction. 4.2 Device Fabrication The sample under investigation is a nano-pillar array of VO2 tunnel junctions. 10 ±0.5 nm thick VO2 is epitaxially grown on conducting Nb-doped TiO2 (001) via reactive oxide molecular beam epitaxy using a Veeco GEN10 system. 1 nm thick Al2 O3 followed by 1 nm thick HfO2 is then deposited by atomic layer deposition (ALD) at 100 o C 44 200 nm Nano‐pillar Au 80 nm Pd HfO2 Al2O3 VO2 20 nm Nb‐TiO2 (001) 1 nm 1 nm 10 nm 500 μm Figure 4.1. Illustrated cross-section of the fabricated nano-pillars. and 110 o C, respectively. Trimethylaluminium and tetrakis (dimethylamino) hafnium metal organic precursors are used for the Al2 O3 and HfO2 respectively, with H2 O as the oxygen source. Previous studies have shown that annealing VO2 at temperatures as low as 150 o C can cause irreversible metallic regions to form on the surface,[25] therefor a low temperature ALD process is selected to preserve the VO2 tunneling interface quality. The top electrodes are electron beam evaporated 20 nm thick Pd and 80 nm thick Au nano-pillars patterned by a lift off process using positive electron beam lithography. The final structure cross section of the fabricated device is illustrated in Fig. 4.1. Stepby-step details of the process can be found in Appendix B. 45 4.3 Tunneling Modulation in VO2 When VO2 is in the metallic state, a metal-insulator-VO2 structure acts as a metalinsulator-metal (MIM) tunnel junction. In the insulating state the opening of a 0.6 eV bandgap around the Fermi level, cuts off states required for direct tunneling (JDT ) from the metal, through the insulator into the VO2 . Direct tunneling is expected to be the dominant mechanism in MIM tunnel junctions. However, the absence of states near the Fermi level in the insulating state of VO2 will drastically lower the tunneling current. In the insulating state, traps in the tunneling oxide are expected to dominate transport through Poole-Frenkel (JP F ) conduction.[25] The change in density of states near the Fermi level leads to a high conductance state in the MIM case and low conductance when the bandgap forms. The change in density of states near the Fermi level leads to a high conductance state in the MIM case and low conductance when the bandgap forms, as illustrated in the band diagrams in Fig. 4.2 (a) and (b), respectively. 46 (b) JPF E 2.8eV Hybrid Upper Hubbard Band 3d||/3dπ EF Pd 3d|| Lower Hubbard Band Al2O3 HfO2 JPF Pd JDT 4.2eV E ON Al2O3 HfO2 OFF 2.8eV (a) 3d||/3dπ VO2 (Metallic) 2pπ VO2 (Insulating) Figure 4.2. (a) The OFF state occurs when VO2 is below the transition temperature, where a bandgap of 0.6 eV opens around the Fermi level creating a deficiency of states to tunnel into. Transport is by Poole-Frenkel conduction through trap states. (b) The ON state, when VO2 is below Tc , results in an MIM structure and direct tunneling contributions to the transport. This process enables conductance modulation. 4.3.1 Direct Tunneling A symmetrical MIM junction with a thin tunneling dielectric is illustrated in Fig. 4.3(a), where EF is the Fermi level, φ0 is the barrier height and d is the dielectric thickness. When bias is applied, all of the voltage is assumed to drop on the dielectric, resulting in the non-equilibrium band diagram seen in Fig. 4.3(b). The current through this MIM junction can be expressed as 47 (a) d* (b) d qφ0 qφ0 EF EF EF qV EF M1 I M2 Figure 4.3. (a) Band diagram of a symmetrical MIM structure in equilibrium. (b) Symmetrical MIM under bias, where V > φ0 ZEm J= D(Ex )ξdEx (4.1) 0 where D(Ex ) is the tunneling probability derived from the WKB approximation. ξ is the density of states available for tunneling from electrode 1 to electrode 2, defined as ξ = ξ1 − ξ2 4πm2 q ξ1 = h3 ξ2 = 4πm2 q h3 Z∞ f (E)dEr 0 Z∞ (4.2) f (E + eV )dEr 0 where, the integral is calculated over all energies, m is the effective mass, h is Planck’s 48 constant, q is the elementary charge of an electron, V is the applied bias, and f is the Fermi-Dirac distribution. For moderate applied bias (0 ≤ V ≤ φ0 ), d*=d, and φ0 = φ0 , the current density is given by [52] " JDT = Jo V Φo − 2 s exp −C V Φo − 2 ! − V Φo + 2 s exp −C V Φo + 2 !# (4.3) Where, q2 2πhd2 √ 4πd 2mq C= h Jo = 4.3.2 (4.4) (4.5) Poole-Frenkel Conduction Poole-Frenkel conduction is trap assisted thermionic emission process observed in dielectrics.[53] A trap in the dielectric creates a potential well and an external field applied reduces the potential barrier seen by a carrier in the well by r ∆U = qE πε (4.6) Where, q is the elementary charge, E is the electric field, and ε is dielectric constant. Thermionic emission of electrons into a conduction band is proportional to −ΦB ∝ exp kB T (4.7) Where U0 is the ionization energy, k is Boltzmanns constant and T is temperature. 49 ΦB EF Oxide EF Electric Field Figure 4.4. Schematic band diagram of Poole-Frenkel emission under bias. In the presence of a field the barrier is lowered by (4.6) and the emission becomes proportional to −(U0 − ∆U ) ∝ exp kB T (4.8) Resulting in the Poole-Frenkel conduction equation " JP F = KE · exp − where K is a constant. q kB T r ΦB − qE πε !# (4.9) 50 4.4 Conductive Atomic Force Microscopy of VO2 Tunnel Junctions 4.4.1 Experimental setup Scanning electron micrographs of the pillar array is shown in 4.5 (a), and an individual 200 nm diameter pillar is shown in 4.5 (b). Electrical and topographic measurements are recorded using a custom built low temperature scanning probe microscope. The cantilever used is a Cr-Au µmasch NSC-16 with a nominal tip radius smaller than 35 nm. Electrical connections are made to the substrate which acts as a common bottom electrode and the top contact to each individual device is established by making mechanical contact between the cantilever and the nano-pillar under investigation. The current is corrected for a presumably instrument originated constant 20 pA current. For topographic measurements, the deflection of the cantilever is measured by laser based interferometry. Topographical measurements of the devices are shown in Fig. 4.5 (c), where individual nano-pillars are clearly observable. The measurements are performed without breaking vacuum and at a controlled temperature. 51 (a) (b) 198 nm 300 nm (c) Figure 4.5. (a) Scanning electron micrograph (SEM) of the fabricated nano-pillar arrays. (b) Zoomed in SEM of an individual nano-pillar. (c) Topography scan of the area under investigation. The single pillars are clearly discernible. 4.4.2 Tunneling Current Modulation Across the MIT Using the setup described above, the voltage is swept and the current across the nanopillar tunnel junctions are measured. For each temperature and every nano-pillar, 20 I-V traces are recorded and averaged under identical conditions. The averaged I-V traces between 260 to 360 K are collected in 5 K steps are shown in Fig. 4.6 (a-c) for three individual nano-pillars. Pillars A and B show an abrupt increase in the tunneling current at 285 K and pillar C shows a similar increase at 290 K. The difference in transition temperature (Tc ) could be due to variation in local strain and stoichiometry.[25] As the devices are heated across Tc , the tunneling current abruptly increases as a result of the 52 (b) 1E-8 Pillar A 1E-9 1E-9 1E-10 1E-10 Current (A) Current (A) (a) 1E-8 1E-11 1E-12 1E-13 1E-11 1E-12 1E-13 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 Voltage (V) (c) 1E-8 Pillar C 1E-11 1E-12 1E-13 -0.2 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 Temperature (K) 1E-10 -0.4 -0.4 Voltage (V) 1E-9 Current (A) Pillar B 0.0 Voltage (V) 0.2 0.4 260 265 270 275 280 285 290 295 300 305 310 315 320 325 330 335 340 Figure 4.6. I-V traces for temperatures between 260 to 340 K in 5 K intervals as indicated by the legend for 3 individual pillars. collapsing bandgap. For each nano-pillar, the conductance as a function of temperature (T) at different voltages is shown in Fig. 4.7 (a-c). At Tc , the conductance of the pillars changes by approximately two orders of magnitude at ±0.3 V, where the precise magnitude of current increase depends on the voltage at which the comparison is carried out. While the tunneling conductance abruptly changes across Tc when VO2 changes phase, it is nearly constant at all temperatures below Tc (2x10−11 S at ±0.3 V for pillar A) when VO2 is insulating and for temperatures above Tc (2x10−9 S at ±0.3 V for pillar A) when VO2 is metallic indicating the tunneling is heavily dependent on the insulating or metallic state of VO2 . 53 (b) 1E-8 Pillar A Conductance (S) Conductance (S) (a) 1E-8 1E-9 1E-10 1E-11 260 280 300 320 340 1E-10 1E-11 260 280 300 Pillar C Voltage 260 -0.5 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 1E-9 1E-10 1E-11 1E-12 280 300 320 320 340 Temperature (K) Temperature (K) Conductance (S) 1E-9 1E-12 1E-12 (c) 1E-8 Pillar B 340 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 Temperature (K) Figure 4.7. Conductance vs. temperature for 3 nano-pillars showing a tunneling conductance response to the abrupt MIT in VO2 . 4.4.3 Modeling The transport before and after the MIT transition is modeled using Poole-Frenkel conduction and direct tunneling. Shown in Fig. 4.8(a) is a typical J-V trace for Pillar B in the low conductance state (270 K), with Poole-Frenkel, JP F conduction (4.9) superimposed and shows a good agreement to the measured current. The inset in Fig. 4.8 (a) √ shows a linear relationship between ln(I/V) vs. V , which is characteristic of PooleFrenkel conduction [54, 55, 56]. Fig. 4.8(b) shows a typical J-V trace for the high conductance state (330 K) of Pillar B. Neither Poole-Frenkel nor direct tunneling only is able to describe the observed I-V curve as shown in Fig. 4.8(b). A combination of 54 direct tunneling (4.3) and Poole-Frenkel conduction (Jmetallic =JDT +JP F ), is found to be in good agreement to the data. For the high conductance case, direct tunneling dominates at low voltages, but Poole-Frenkel conduction, which is heavily field dependent, dominates at higher voltages. The fitting is performed with with the following approximations. A dielectric constant of 110 is approximated from measurements on C-V pads deposited under the same low temperature conditions and is in good agreement with other reports of low temperature ALD deposition [57, 58].ΦB is estimated by plotting ln(I/V) vs. 1/kB T in the p semiconducting state for fixed voltages, where the slope is ΦB − qE/πε and ΦB is estimated to be 0.52 eV. In the metallic state, the fitting constant K, calculated from analysis on the semiconducting state tunnel junction is fixed; ΦB for J D T and m* for JP F are fit and found be 0.48 eV and 0.32m0 . The change in ΦB can be understood as a change in the potential arising from the work function difference between metallic and semiconducting VO2 . Poole-Frenkel analysis can result in barrier heights that are lower than the Schottky barrier height (SBH) of the metal/insulator and is explained by the high density of traps, especially at the electrode/insulator interface resulting in a potential well that is lower by the applied bias.[55] The high trap density could be a result of the low temperature ALD process [57, 58] and the electron beam evaporation of the electrode, both of which have been shown to increase traps in dielectrics.[59] The fitting parameters and barrier heights are described in table 1. 55 (a) 102 ln(I/V) ln(S) 101 J (A/cm2) 100 -1 10 -21.0 -22.4 -23.8 -25.2 -26.6 0.45 0.53 10 0.60 sqrt(V) -2 0.67 V 0.75 10-3 10-4 10-5 10-6 (b) OFF state -0.4 -0.2 Data (270 K) Poole-Frenkel 0.0 0.2 0.4 Voltage (V) 10 2 101 J (A/cm2) 100 10-1 10-2 10-3 Data (330 K) Poole-Frenkel Direct Tunneling Total 10-4 10-5 10-6 ON state -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 Voltage (V) Figure 4.8. (a) Typical J-V off-state curve (pillar B 270 K) in the MIS case and the corresponding √ fit using Poole-Frenkel conduction. The inset shows a linear relationship of ln(I/V) vs. V , which is characteristic of Poole-Frenkel conduction. (b) Typical J-V trace (pillar B from 330 K) of an on-state with the device in an MIM case, along with fitting showing the Poole-Frenkel (red curve) and direct tunneling (green curve) contribution; the total is shown in blue. The parameters used are detailed in table 1 56 Table 4.1. Constants and fitting parameters used for direct tunneling and Poole-Frenkel conduction. Effective barrier height Effective tunneling mass Dielectric thickness Dielectric constant Poole-Frenkel fitting constant Effective trap barrier height 4.5 Φo = 3.5eV m∗ = 0.32mo d = 2nm = 11o k = 2.45x10−4 S/cm ΦB = 0.52 eV (semiconducting), 0.48 eV (metallic) Conclusion In conclusion, VO2 nanoscale tunnel junctions show an abrupt change in conductance of approximately two orders of magnitude across the MIT. The tunneling transport for the MIM case is modeled using Poole-Frenkel and direct tunneling. For the VO2 in the insulating state Poole-Frenkel alone is used to explain the conduction. Without states to directly tunnel into, the off-state leakage is defined by defect driven conduction and it stands to reason that higher quality dielectric depositions might further improve the Ion /Iof f of VO2 tunnel junctions. Chapter 5 Conclusion In this thesis, tunneling current modulation in VO2 nanoscale tunnel junctions across a thermally induced MIT is experimentally demonstrated. A two order of magnitude change in tunneling conductance is measured, and modeled using Poole-Frenkel conduction and direct tunneling. Nanoscale X-ray diffraction on tensile strained VO2 revealed that metallic filaments from an electronically driven transition are R-phase. The channel is analyzed as a network of resistors to determine the filament size and quantify the ratio of M1/R phase coexistence under varying resistive loads. Time dependent structural evolution of a VO2 oscillator reveal that the oscillation is a result of repeatedly reforming and breaking of an R filament and structural phase transition from M1 to R and back to M1 plays an integral role. 5.1 Conclusions on VO2 Nanoscale Tunnel Junctions 200 nm diameter VO2 tunnel junctions were fabricated on a Nb doped TiO2 (001) substrate, with a 2 nm (1 nm Al2 O3 + 1 nm HfO2 ) tunneling dielectric deposited by low 58 temperature ALD. Tunneling transport characteristics across a thermally driven MIT transition is characterized and modeled. A two order of magnitude change in tunneling current is measured across the MIT. In the insulating state Poole-Frenkel conduction is used to explain the conduction. In the metallic state a combination of direct tunneling and Poole-Frenkel conduction is used to model the measured I-V curves. Without states to directly tunnel into, the off-state leakage is defined by defect driven conduction and it stands to reason that higher quality dielectric depositions would reduce the Iof f and improve the Ion /Iof f of VO2 tunnel junctions. 5.2 Conclusions on Nanoscale Hard X-ray of the Electrically Driven Transition in VO2 In this work, the structural evolution during the electrically driven insulator to metal transition of tensile strained VO2 is investigated by nanoscale X-ray diffraction. X-ray diffraction intensity maps of the channel are collected in the HRS and in the LRS. 2D mapping of the channel revealed a dynamic R metallic filament in an insulating M1 film during an electrically driven MIT. In the LRS, the filament width is found to be linearly proportional to the applied current through the device. The ratio of R/M1 phase coexistence, and subsequently the magnitude of the electrically induced transition can be controlled by a resistive load. Additionally, the time dependent structural evolution of a VO2 oscillator reveal that the oscillation is a result of repeated forming and breaking of an R filament and structural phase transition from M1 to R and back to M1 plays an integral role. 59 5.3 Future Work A smaller beamsize such as the 40 nm beam used at ID-26 at the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Labs could be used to probe even smaller structural features, such as those found at the M1/R boundary. Additionally, other materials which are suspected of undergoing electrically induced structural transitions can be characterized using nanoscale XRD with insitu electrical biasing. High speed XRD can be used to further probe the the structural evolution of VO2 oscillators in the sub /mus time scale to explore any metastable phases that may form between R and M1. The VO2 nanoscale tunnel junctions presented in this work are dominated by PooleFrenkel conduction, but by developing a low temperature ALD process with fewer traps on the dielectric the Ion /Iof f may be improved. The MIT based tunnel junction proposed in this thesis can explored in other materials where the bandgap is modulated through a metal to insulator transition. Further, if a repeatable mechanism for controlling the MIT in VO2 by a third terminal is developed a high speed 3-terminal tunnel junction based off VO2 could be realized. Appendix A 2-Terminal Process Flow 1. Initial Clean (a) Remove large Ag particles (used for initial resistivity measurements) using an acetone spray bottle (b) Sonicate in acetone for 5 minutes. (c) Rinse in IPA (15 s) (d) Rinse in DI water (15 s) (e) N2 dry 2. MMA/PMMA Bilayer Spin Coat (a) Dehydrate substrate, by baking at 96 o C for 60 s (b) Apply MMA EL11 and spin at 4000 RPM for 45 s. This should produce ∼500µm thick coating (c) Bake at 150 o C for 3 min (d) Cool for 15 s (e) Apply PMMA 950A3 and spin at 4000 RPM for 45 seconds. This should produce ∼150 nm thick coating (f) Bake at 180 o C for 3 min (g) Cool for 15 s 3. Source-Drain Level Ebeam: 2-8 µm length devices 61 • Dose = 380 µC/cm2 • Beamsize = 120 nm 4. Source-Drain Level Develop in MIBK/IPA 1:3 for 60 s 5. Source-Drain Metal Deposition (a) Set Platten cooling to 5 o C for the duration of the deposition (b) Deposit 20 nm Pd (c) Deposit 80 nm Au 6. Source-Drain Metal Lift-off in RemoverPG (a) Heat up RemoverPG from MicroChem to 70 o C (b) Insert sample for 5 min (c) Using a pipette, create agitation in the heated RemoverPG bath to until the most of the metal is lifted off via visual inspection. (d) Leave in heated RemoverPG for another 5 min (e) Rinse in Acetone (15 s) (f) Rinse in IPA (15 s) (g) Rinse in DI water (15 s) (h) N2 dry 7. MMA/PMMA Bilayer Spin Coat (a) Dehydrate substrate, by baking at 96 o C for 60 s (b) Apply MMA EL11 and spin at 4000 RPM for 45 s. This should produce ∼500µm thick coating (c) Bake at 150 o C for 3 min (d) Cool for 15 s (e) Apply PMMA 950A3 and spin at 4000 RPM for 45 seconds. This should produce ∼150 nm thick coating (f) Bake at 180 o C for 3 min 62 (g) Cool for 15 s 8. Active Level Ebeam • Dose = 380 µC/cm2 • Beamsize = 120 nm 9. Active Level Develop in MIBK/IPA 1:3 for 60 s 10. Active Level etch in Plasmatherm 720 • CF4 = 20 sccm • Pressure: 20 mT • Power = 75 W • Time = 180 s 11. Resist Strip in Remover 1165 (a) Heat up Remover 1165 from MicroChem to 70 o C (b) Insert sample for 15 min (c) Sonicate in Remover 1165 for 3 min (d) Rinse in Acetone (15 s) (e) Rinse in IPA (15 s) (f) Rinse in DI water (15 s) (g) N2 dry Appendix B Nanoscale Tunnel Junction Process Flow 1. Initial Clean (a) Sonicate in acetone for 10 minutes. (b) Rinse in IPA (15 s) (c) Rinse in DI water (15 s) (d) N2 dry 2. Tunnel Dielectric Deposition on Cambridge Savannah 200 (a) Al2 O3 Deposition Cycle: 0.015 s of H2 O, wait 45 s, 0.015 s of Trimethylaluminium. Each cycle produces 1 Å at 100 o C substrate temperature and the metal organic precursor at room temperature. (b) HfO2 Deposition Cycle: 0.015 s of H2 O, wait 45 s, 0.15 s of Tetrakis(Dimethylamido)Hafnium(Hf(NMe2 )4 ). Each cycle produces 1 Å at 110o C substrate temperature and a 75o C metal organic precursor temperature. 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