Semiconductors | 2019

Study of the Formation Process of Memristor Structures Based on Copper Sulfide

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


An alternative to the currently existing elemental basis for creating dynamic random-access memory and flash memory is memristor structures, i.e., two-electrode systems, whose operation is based on the resistance switching effect. In this paper, the results of studying the specific features of the production of memristor structures on the basis of copper sulfide as a promising material providing high-efficiency performance of the structures are reported. The process of copper sulfurization is considered. In this process, the surface region of the copper layer is transformed into sulfide, and the remaining part of the layer is used as the active electrode for the later formed memristor structure. It is shown that, as the concentrations of the initial chemical reagents is increased, the surface roughness of the sulfide layer significantly increases. The sulfide growth rate at optimal initial concentrations of the chemical reagents is ~30 nm/min. In studies of memristor structures, it is established that, as the copper sulfide thickness is increased, the ratio between the resistances in the low- and high-resistance states increases from 11.2 to 12.5. In the memristor structures formed in the study, the time of switching from the high- to low-resistance state is about 1.3 μs, whereas the time of switching from the low- to high-resistance state is 0.9 μs.

Volume 53
Pages 2024-2028
DOI 10.1134/s1063782619150041
Language English
Journal Semiconductors

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