Polarity effects on wake‐up behavior of Al0.94B0.06N ferroelectrics

Author:

Yazawa Keisuke12ORCID,Drury Daniel23,Hayden John4,Maria Jon‐Paul4ORCID,Trolier‐McKinstry Susan4,Zakutayev Andriy1,Brennecka Geoff L.2

Affiliation:

1. Materials Science Center National Renewable Energy Laboratory Golden Colorado USA

2. Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Colorado School of Mines Golden Colorado USA

3. U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command—Army Research Laboratory Adelphi Maryland USA

4. Department of Materials Science and Engineering and the Materials Research Institute The Pennsylvania State University University Park Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractWurtzite ferroelectric materials are promising candidates for energy‐efficient memory technologies, particularly for applications requiring high operating temperatures. Asymmetric wake‐up behaviors, in which the polarization reversal depends both on polarity and cycle number for the first few dozen cycles, must be better understood for reliable device operation. Here, the detailed analysis of the asymmetric wake‐up behavior of thin film Al0.94B0.06N was performed combining time‐resolved switching measurements with Rayleigh analysis, piezoelectric measurements, and etching experiments of progressively switched samples. The analysis shows that the gradual opening of the polarization hysteresis loops associated with wake‐up is driven by a gradual increase in the domain‐wall density and/or domain‐wall mobility with electric field cycle to the polarity opposite to the growth polarity. The insights of this discovery will help to guide interface and polarity design in the eventual deployment of reliable devices based on these materials.

Funder

Division of Materials Research

Basic Energy Sciences

Defense Sciences Office, DARPA

Energy Frontier Research Centers

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Ceramics and Composites

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