Annealing and Characterization of Zinc Doped Niobium Oxide for Neuromorphic Computing Applications
POSTER
Abstract
Deposition of niobium dioxide on silicon wafers is a potential post-transistor application for memristors as part of a neuromorphic computing architecture. Since pure niobium dioxide (NbO2) has a crystallization and insulator to metal transition (IMT) temperature that exceeds the thermal budget of current semiconductor processing techniques, doping NbO2 to reduce both crystallization and IMT temperatures is essential for it to become usable. Through numerous tube furnace anneals with systematically varied temperatures and times, we show that a 10 percent zinc doped sample lowered the NbO2 crystallization temperature by an average of 75°C, lowering the temperature range in which crystallization is observed from 825-900°C to 750-825°C, along with a decrease in requisite annealing time. The crystallization patterns were first observed through optical microscope imaging, and confirmed with XPS and Raman Spectroscopy. Preliminary optical reflectivity measurements performed in an ultra-high vacuum system in an effort to measure the IMT will be discussed.
Presenters
-
Emma G Sargent
SUNY Brockport
Authors
-
Emma G Sargent
SUNY Brockport
-
Alexander Mesiti
SUNY Brockport
-
Carl A Ventrice
SUNY Polytechnic Institute
-
Karsten Beckmann
SUNY Polytechnic
-
Nathaniel Cady
SUNY Polytechnic
-
Matthew C. Sullivan
Ithaca College
-
Timothy N Walter
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory
-
Hans Cho
U.S. Naval ResearchLaboratory
-
Alexander C Kozen
University of Maryland