4.3 Article

Density functional simulations of a conductive bridging random access memory cell: Ag filament formation in amorphous GeS2

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.6.035001

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [322832]
  2. Academy of Finland (AKA) [322832, 322832] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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Density functional/molecular dynamics simulations were performed to study the migration of silver atoms and the formation of conductive filaments in a chalcogenide electrolyte under an electric field. The simulations showed significant atomic diffusion and the formation of conductive clusters at the platinum electrode. The electronic structure analysis revealed changes in the dissolved silver atoms upon cluster formation. Despite the presence of conductive silver wires, the electrolyte as a whole does not conduct.
Density functional/molecular dynamics simulations have been performed to shed light on the drift of Ag atoms in an amorphous GeS2 solid-state electrolyte between Ag and Pt electrodes in the presence of a finite electric field. The system models a conductive bridging random access memory device, where the electric field induces the formation of conductive filaments across the chalcogenide. Simulations of a 1019-atom structure under an external electrostatic potential of 0.20 eV/angstrom at 480 and 680 K show significant atomic diffusion within 500 ps. Ag migration and the formation of percolating filaments occur in both cases. Three simulations for a smaller model (472 atoms) confirm the formation of percolating Ag strings. Significantly reduced mobility of Ag cations at 380 K means that Ag migration to the Pt electrode did not occur within 1 ns. The electronic structure analysis of selected snapshots shows that dissolved Ag atoms become markedly cationic, which changes when Ag clusters form at the Pt electrode. The electrolyte does not conduct, despite percolating single-atom Ag wire segments. Sulfur becomes anionic during the migration as a result of Ag-S bonding, and the effect is most pronounced near the active electrode. The formation of conductive filaments requires a percolating network of Ag clusters to grow from the Pt interface, and the weakest link of this network is at the Ag electrode.

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