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Ferroelectric-like charge trapping thin-film transistors and their evaluation as memories and synaptic devices
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-09, 09:20 authored by Alwin Daus, Pawel Lenarczyk, Luisa Petti, Niko Münzenrieder, Stefan Knobelspies, Giuseppe Cantarella, Christian Vogt, Giovanni A Salvatore, Mathieu Luisier, Gerhard TrösterThis work presents a defect charging mechanism in 5-nm-thick amorphous Al2O3 thin-films fabricated on plastic, which leads to multistate memory effects, and thus the realization of synaptic thin-film transistors (TFTs) for neuromorphic applications. First, the Al2O3 thin-films are characterized in metal–insulator–metal stacks. These devices exhibit ferroelectric-like behavior, which is visible in the small-signal capacitance and the surface charge density. Furthermore, the quantum-mechanical simulation of the current–voltage characteristic leads to a physical model with trap charges close to the anode interface where deep-level traps are identified by fitting the experimentally obtained resonant tunneling peaks. The trap charge lifetime and frequency behavior is evaluated in InGaZnO4 TFTs, where the 5-nm-thick Al2O3 layer is employed as gate dielectric. At an operating voltage as low as ±2 V, a charge trapping retention up to ˜3 h and a discernable ON/OFF read-out with a factor >3 at 2 kHz are achieved. When subjected to a train of gate–source voltage pulses, the TFTs show charge integration properties which emulate facilitating and depressing behaviors of biological synapses. These results indicate that thin low-temperature defect-rich metal-oxide dielectrics may be candidates for low-voltage memory applications and neuromorphic circuits on unconventional substrates.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
Advanced Electronic MaterialsISSN
2199-160XPublisher
WileyExternal DOI
Issue
12Volume
3Page range
1700309Department affiliated with
- Engineering and Design Publications
Research groups affiliated with
- Sensor Technology Research Centre Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes