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Investigating the metal to insulator transition in crystalline NbO<sub>2</sub> for neuromorphic computing applications

POSTER

Abstract

The metal-insulator transition (MIT) of NbO2 is promising for technological applications where a self-regulated resistivity is needed like in neuromorphic computing. Though the Mott nature (electron correlation) of the MIT of NbO2 arises purely by comparison to VO2, the actual transition mechanism in NbOx-based memristors remains unclear mainly due to the degree of participation of multi-phases of niobium oxides, likely induced after electroforming. By investigating phase-pure, crystalline NbO2, we avoid the uncertainty created in electro-formed NbOx-based devices. Using surface sensitive techniques like LEED, HAXPES, and LEEM on NbO2(440)/Al2O3(006) thin films, we show that the phase transition does not extend to the film surface. XPS of the crystalline NbO2 reveals a second-order Peierls transition in the bulk, in agreement with DFT results, indicating electron correlation effects do not play a significant role. In addition, the observed temperature dependence of the Nb-Nb dimer distance which controls the NbO2 resistivity suggests that the switching of future phase-pure NbO2 memristors could be controlled by resistive heating in an analog rather than digital fashion.

Presenters

  • Galo Paez Fajardo

    Department of Physics, Binghamton University

Authors

  • Galo Paez Fajardo

    Department of Physics, Binghamton University

  • Matthew J. Wahila

    Binghamton University, Department of Physics, Binghamton University, Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy, Binghamton University

  • Jatinkumar Rana

    Department of Physics, Binghamton University

  • Brooks Tellekamp

    National Renewable Energy Lab, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

  • William A. Doolittle

    Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology

  • Louis F. J. Piper

    Binghamton University, Department of Physics, Binghamton University, Physics, Applied Physics, and Astronomy, Binghamton University