Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Focused ion beam and field-emission microscopy of metallic filaments in memory devices based on thin films of an ambipolar organic compound consisting of oxadiazole, carbazole, and fluorene units

January 1, 2013

We report on the mechanism of operation of organic thin film resistive memory architectures based on an ambipolar compound consisting of oxadiazole, carbazole, and fluorene units. Cross-sections of the devices have been imaged by electron microscopy both before and after applying a voltage. The micrographs reveal the growth of filaments, with diameters of 50 nm–100 nm, on the metal cathode. We suggest that these are formed by the drift of aluminium ions from the anode and are responsible for the observed switching and negative differential resistance phenomena in the memory devices.

Publication Year 2013
Title Focused ion beam and field-emission microscopy of metallic filaments in memory devices based on thin films of an ambipolar organic compound consisting of oxadiazole, carbazole, and fluorene units
DOI 10.1063/1.4808026
Authors Christopher Pearson, Leon Bowen, Myung Won Lee, Alison L. Fisher, Katherine E. Linton, Martin R. Bryce, Michael C. Petty
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Applied Physics Letters
Index ID 70118562
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse