Temperature of Conductive Nanofilaments in Hexagonal Boron Nitride Based Memristors Showing Threshold Resistive Switching
Resumen
Two-terminal metal/insulator/metal (MIM) memristors exhibiting threshold
resistive switching (RS) can develop advanced key tasks in solid-state nano/
micro-electronic circuits, such as selectors and integrate-and-fire electronic
neurons. MIM-like memristors using multilayer hexagonal boron nitride
(h-BN) as dielectric are especially interesting because they have shown
threshold RS with ultra-low energy consumption per state transition down
to the zeptojoule regime. However, the factors enabling stable threshold
RS at such low operation energies are still not fully understood. Here it is
shown that the threshold RS in 150 nm × 150 nm Au/Ag/h-BN/Au memristors is especially stable because the temperature in the h-BN stack during
operation (i.e., at low currents ≈1 μA) is very low (i.e., ≈310 K), due to the
high in-plane thermal conductivity of h-BN and its low thickness. Only
when the device is operated at higher currents (i.e., ≈200 μA) the temperatures at the h-BN increase remarkably (i.e., >500 K), which produce
a stable non-volatile conductive nanofilament (CNF). This work can bring
new insights to understand the performance of 2D materials based RS
devices, and help to develop the integration of 2D materials in high-density
nanoelectronics