Reset-First and Multibit-Level Resistive-Switching Behavior of Lanthanum Nickel Oxide (LaNiO3-x) Thin Films

Materials (Basel). 2023 Jul 14;16(14):4992. doi: 10.3390/ma16144992.

Abstract

The resistive random-access memory (RRAM) with multi-level storage capability has been considered one of the most promising emerging devices to mimic synaptic behavior and accelerate analog computations. In this study, we investigated the reset-first bipolar resistive switching (RS) and multi-level characteristics of a LaNiO3-x thin film deposited using a reactive magnetron co-sputtering method. Polycrystalline phases of LaNiO3 (LNO), without La2O3 and NiO phases, were observed at similar fractions of Ni and La at a constant partial pressure of oxygen. The relative chemical proportions of Ni3+ and Ni2+ ions in LaNiO3-x indicated that it was an oxygen-deficient LaNiO3-x thin film, exhibiting RS behavior, compared to LNO without Ni2+ ions. The TiN/LaNiO3-x/Pt devices exhibited gradual resistance changes under various DC/AC voltage sweeps and consecutive pulse modes. The nonlinearity values of the conductance, measured via constant-pulse programming, were 0.15 for potentiation and 0.35 for depression, indicating the potential of the as-fabricated devices as analog computing devices. The LaNiO3-x-based device could reach multi-level states without an electroforming step and is a promising candidate for state-of-the-art RS memory and synaptic devices for neuromorphic computing.

Keywords: LaNiO3; depression; potentiation; rare-earth nickelates; reset-first resistive switching; resistive random-access memory; synaptic device.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy, Korea, under the Industrial Strategic Technology Development Program (grant no. 10068075).