Giant resistive switching in mixed phase BiFeO3 via phase population control

Highly-strained coherent interfaces, between rhombohedral-like (R) and tetragonal-like (T) phases in BiFeO3 thin films, often show enhanced electrical conductivity in comparison to non-interfacial regions. In principle, changing the population and distribution of these interfaces should therefore al...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Edwards, David, Browne, Niall, Holsgrove, Kristina M., Naden, Aaron B., Sayedghaee, Sayed Omid, Xu, Bin, Prosandeev, Sergey, Wang, Dawei, Mazumdar, Dipanjan, Duchamp, Martial, Gupta, Arunava, Kalinin, Sergei V., Arredondo, Miryam, McQuaid, Raymond G. P., Bellaiche, Laurent, Gregg, J. Marty, Kumar, Amit
Other Authors: School of Materials Science & Engineering
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139068
Description
Summary:Highly-strained coherent interfaces, between rhombohedral-like (R) and tetragonal-like (T) phases in BiFeO3 thin films, often show enhanced electrical conductivity in comparison to non-interfacial regions. In principle, changing the population and distribution of these interfaces should therefore allow different resistance states to be created. However, doing this controllably has been challenging to date. Here, we show that local thin film phase microstructures (and hence R–T interface densities) can be changed in a thermodynamically predictable way (predictions made using atomistic simulations) by applying different combinations of mechanical stress and electric field. We use both pressure and electric field to reversibly generate metastable changes in microstructure that result in very large changes of resistance of up to 108%, comparable to those seen in Tunnelling Electro-Resistance (TER) devices.