Abstract
Radiofrequency switches are critical components in wireless communication systems and consumer electronics. Emerging devices include switches based on microelectromechanical systems and phase-change materials. However, these devices suffer from disadvantages such as large physical dimensions and high actuation voltages. Here we propose and demonstrate a nanoscale radiofrequency switch based on a memristive device. The device can be programmed with a voltage as low as 0.4 V and has an ON/OFF conductance ratio up to 1012 with long state retention. We measure the radiofrequency performance of the switch up to 110 GHz and demonstrate low insertion loss (0.3 dB at 40 GHz), high isolation (30 dB at 40 GHz), an average cutoff frequency of 35 THz and competitive linearity and power-handling capability. Our results suggest that, in addition to their application in memory and computing, memristive devices are also a leading contender for radiofrequency switch applications.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
High-performance switches are critical components for the radiofrequency (RF) circuits that are widely used in wireless communications and consumer electronics1,2,3,4. Intense research in emerging switch technologies has focused on achieving levels of performance far beyond that available using CMOS (complementary metal oxide semiconductors) technology. Microelectromechanical system-based switches use a mechanical movement, usually activated by a voltage/current, to control an ohmic or capacitive contact4,5. Although superior to gallium arsenide and silicon-based switches in terms of energy consumption and transmission properties, microelectromechanical system switches suffer from issues such as speed, dielectric charging and contact interface degradation4,5. Other devices rely on recrystallization and amorphorization of a phase-change material (for example, germanium telluride) or the metal–insulator phase transition in strongly correlated materials (such as vanadium oxide, VO2) to change the resistance state6,7,8,9. However, germanium telluride-based switches are constrained by a large switching energy and a limited resistance modulation ratio6,7,8. VO2 has an insulator-to-metal transition temperature of 67 °C (refs 10, 11) that limits the application of this device as a RF switch in a wider temperature range. Even worse is that the insulator phase transition in VO2 is volatile, which means the device needs to be kept at above 67 °C to maintain a low-resistance state. Furthermore, most of the aforementioned emerging RF switches are of too large physical size to permit large-scale integration with nanometre CMOS RF circuits.
Memristive devices are two-terminal resistance switches whose internal states are determined by the history of applied voltage and/or current12,13. Switching is typically related to the formation/rupture of one or more conductive filaments between two electrodes through either electrochemical reactions or the migration of mobile ions that modulate the interfacial properties14,15,16. These devices have demonstrated a number of attractive features, such as nonvolatility, low switching energy (∼pJ; ref. 17), fast switching speed (<ns; ref. 18), high endurance (1012 cycles)19, excellent scalability20,21,22 and CMOS compatibility25. As such, memristive devices are promising candidates for universal memory23,24, reconfigurable bits25, nonvolatile logic26 and unconventional computing27.
Here we report a nanoscale RF switch based on a nonvolatile memristive device that consists of a pair of electrochemically asymmetric metal electrodes separated by a nanometre-scale air gap. Different from the aforementioned applications, RF circuits require a switch having low ON-state resistance (RON) and low OFF-state capacitance (COFF) to achieve a high cutoff frequency (fc=1/2πRONCOFF) while maintaining sufficient linearity to be used in practical wide-band systems. In the design of our memristive RF switches, we realized that the RONCOFF product is proportional to the product of the resistivity (ρ) of the conductive filament and the effective dielectric constant (ɛeff) of the materials between the electrodes (ρ·ɛeff). Consequently, we designed a device on thermally grown silicon oxide with two metal electrodes that are separated by an air gap. The active metal we used is silver (Ag), which has the lowest bulk resistivity (ρ=1.59 × 10−6 Ω cm) among all metals2, and the air gap on silicon oxide leads to a low effective dielectric constant (ɛeff≈5.5) for the air–substrate interface in the active device region. The ability for the switch to function within an air gap, rather than a gap filled with the Ag-doped GeSe2 film on which previous nanoionic switches have relied28, is enabled by the nanoscale feature size of the demonstrated device. Our memristive RF switch can be programmed with a voltage as low as 0.4 V and has an ON/OFF conductance ratio up to 1012. We also demonstrate low insertion loss (0.3 dB at 40 GHz), high isolation (30 dB at 40 GHz), a typical cutoff frequency of 35 THz and competitive linearity and power-handling capability.
Results
Device structure and programming
Figure 1 shows the image and geometry of a typical memristive RF switch. It was fabricated on an intrinsic silicon wafer (resistivity>10,000 Ω cm) with a 380-nm-thick thermally grown silicon dioxide using photolithography, electron beam lithography (EBL) and tilted metal evaporation (see Methods, Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Note 1 for details). We used gold (Au) with a thin titanium (Ti) adhesion layer as one terminal and Ag as the other. The terminals were separated by a 35-nm-wide air gap.
Each terminal was connected to a much thicker (>1 μm) copper/aluminium (Cu/Al) pad to minimize the contact resistance with the measurement probes. Additional ground pads and metallization were fabricated at the same time to permit high-frequency characterization of the device within a well-defined coplanar waveguide (CPW) environment. The device exhibited nonvolatile bipolar resistance switching that crosses zero in the current–voltage curve, a signature of memristors (Supplementary Fig. 2 and Supplementary Note 1).
We used a voltage ramp (0 to 3 V or 0 to −0.4 V without return sweeps) to programme the device to the ON or OFF state. A current compliance (Ic) was set to minimize the possible damage to the device without affecting the nonvolatility (Fig. 2a). By applying a maximum sweep voltage of 3 V to the Ag terminal relative to the Au/Ti terminal, a 110-nm-wide continuous Ag filament formed within the 35-nm gap (Fig. 2b). On the other hand, a −0.4-V bias ruptured the filament, programming the device in the OFF state (Fig. 2c). Both the high and low-resistance states (OFF/ON) after programming were nonvolatile, as confirmed by probing with lower voltages (±100 mV). In addition, the ON/OFF conductance ratio of the device was nearly 1012—7 orders of magnitude higher than that of a phase-change material switch29—indicating extremely low current flow in the OFF state. We further discovered that the geometry of the continuous silver filament was dependent on the programing process (see Supplementary Fig. 3 and Supplementary Note 2). Under otherwise identical conditions, a higher current led to a filament with larger diameter and hence lower resistance; however, this may also increase the energy required for programming. The filament formation initiates from the silver side, consistent with the electrochemical reaction mechanism30,31,32. However, previously reported devices with a similar structure but a larger gap size had considerably higher resistance because, rather than a continuous metal filament, isolated metal islands were formed between the electrodes28,31. We used a narrow gap and achieved a continuous filament with low resistance using low programming voltages.
Device-retention properties
We did not observe device failure from OFF to ON state up to 200 °C. To evaluate the ON state retention of the memristive RF switches, we measured the failure time of ON-state devices at different temperatures. The device under test was programmed to low resistance at room temperature and then mounted on a closed loop thermal chuck with an accuracy of ±0.5 °C. The resistance of each device was measured using a semiconductor parameter analyser once every 5 minutes until the current dropped dramatically. Figure 3a shows the measured retention time for our devices at 85, 115, 150, 180 and 200 °C, which ranged from 5 × 105 to ∼103 s. We found that the retention time (τ) followed an Arrhenius relation33 with respect to temperature (T), 1/τ∝exp(−Ea/kT), where Ea is the activation energy for the Ag diffusion and k the Boltzmann constant. By extending the fitted results to room temperature (20 °C), the expected retention time of our device was beyond 3.3 years (Fig. 3b). The long retention time is likely due to the very low mobility of Ag atoms on the surface and inside of silicon oxide (4.5 × 10−13 cm2s−1) at room temperature34. It should be pointed out that the retention measurement in this study was conducted in air without passivation or other hermetic protection. The ‘failed’ devices tested at or below 150 °C could still be SET to the low-resistance state using a voltage sweep as described in Fig. 2a, indicating that the switching was nondestructive. The retention time could be further improved by introducing a hermetic seal around the device.
The Ea extracted from Fig. 3b is 0.77 eV, which lies between the value reported for Ag diffusion on SiO2 surface (0.30–0.44 eV; refs 35, 36, 37) and that for Ag diffusion inside SiO2 (∼1.24 eV; ref. 34). The intermediate activation energy suggests that part of the conductive Ag filament was embedded in the SiO2 substrate during the diffusion process. This is consistent with previous observations that Ag diffusion occurs both on the SiO2 surface and inside of the SiO2 simultaneously38.
Temperature and humidity effects on programming voltages
The switching behaviour is dependent on the ambient temperature. As shown in Fig. 4a, the SET voltage decreased with higher temperatures, while the RESET voltage was insensitive to the ambient temperature. This implies that a higher temperature favours the formation of an Ag filament during the SET process39. The RESET process is dictated by Joule heating and the ambient temperature does not significantly affect the fracturing of the filament. The temperature dependency suggests that a lower programming voltage is needed when the device is used for RF circuits that operate at 85 °C or above. Furthermore, the programming voltage is also affected by the environment humidity (Hr): the SET voltage decreased with higher Hr while the RESET voltage remained almost unchanged (Fig. 4b). The strong correlation between the SET voltage and the humidity could be explained both by the critical role of moisture in the Ag ionization at the anode and by the migration of Ag ions during the SET process. At higher humidity levels, more water molecules are absorbed on the SiO2 surface. A dense hydrogen-bond network is hence formed that provides necessary counter charges for Ag ionization40 and lowers the activation energy for Ag ion migration, leading to a smaller SET voltage. On the other hand, the RESET process of our device originates from filament fracture due to strong Joule heating and is thus less influenced by moisture. It is worthwhile to point out that the ambient humidity also affects the device endurance (see Supplementary Fig. 4 and Supplementary Note 3).
RF performance measurement and modelling
We measured the RF performance of our devices up to 110 GHz using a vector network analyser (VNA). A multiline thru-reflect-line (TRL) calibration using a set of on-wafer standards (Supplementary Fig. 5 and Supplementary Note 4) was used to place the measurement reference plane 5 μm away from the edge of the intrinsic device41,42. The transmission spectra of 33 devices were obtained. In a 50-Ω environment, the average OFF-state isolation and ON-state insertion loss at 40 GHz were 30 and 0.33 dB, respectively (example curves and statistical metrics appear in Fig. 5). At higher frequencies, the OFF-state measurement was limited by weak coupling to undesired modes supported by the intrinsic silicon substrate. This coupling could be eliminated if the switch were integrated in a thin-film grounded CPW structure (Supplementary Fig. 6 and Supplementary Note 5).
We analysed the small-signal performance of the nanoscale memristive switch using a simple physics-based lumped-element equivalent circuit model shown in Fig. 6a. This equivalent circuit model was extracted for each device and used to compute the switch cutoff frequencies. Statistics for the RON, COFF and fc are provided in Fig. 6b–d. Among the 33 measured devices, the RON of the intrinsic switch has a mean value of 3.6 Ω and varies from 2.1 to 6.9 Ω. According to electromagnetic simulations, the extracted range of ON-state resistance corresponds to nanofilaments with cross-sections varying from ∼5 × 10−12 to 80 × 10−12 cm2. The COFF of ∼1.4 fF is predominantly associated with the capacitance of the 35-nm gap, which depends on the effective dielectric constant of the substrate–air interface. This number is consistent with both electromagnetic simulations and simple hand calculations (see Discussion and Supplementary Note 6). The average value of fc is 35 THz and can be further enhanced if an identical device were fabricated at the top of a typical CMOS metal stack that has a much thicker SiO2 layer. Further enhancement of the small-signal performance could also be achieved by controlling the filament geometry to reduce RON.
We also evaluated the linear performance of the switches using a VNA capable of standard two-tone distortion measurements. The third-order intermodulation intercept in the ON- and OFF-states was evaluated using measurements of series and shunt switches to capture a realistic operating environment corresponding to a single-pole double throw switch. In both cases, we found that the third-order intermodulation intercept was beyond the measurement limit of +45 dBm (Supplementary Figs 7 and 8 and Supplementary Note 7).
Self-switching evaluation
RF-induced resistance switching is another potential concern with a memristive switch due to the sub-1 V actuation voltage of these devices. We evaluated the feasibility for self-switching under RF power by exciting both ON- and OFF-state devices and capturing scanning electron microscopy (SEM) photos as we gradually increased the RF power (Fig. 7a,b). A frequency of 5 GHz was selected for these measurements. We observed no evidence of self-switching in measurements of the OFF-state device up to the maximum available generator power of +21 dBm. However, when measuring the ON-state device, we observed self-switching at a power level above +17 dBm. We also investigated the dependence of self-switching on the frequency of excitation by measuring a variety of devices exited with RF energy at 10, 100 and 1,000 MHz. In all cases, we found that OFF state devices were not susceptible to self-switching. Moreover, we observed little correlation between ON-state power-handling capability and RF excitation frequency. Instead, we observed a strong dependence between the ON-state resistance and the power at which the device self-actuated (Fig. 7c). The inverse relationship between power handling and ON-state resistance is consistent with a Joule heating-based reset mechanism and indicates that power handling can be improved by engineering nanofilaments with reduced ON-state resistance (see Supplementary Note 6 for further analysis).
Discussion
To further understand the potential of the memristive devices as RF switches, we verified the ON- and OFF-state parameters using a full-wave electromagnetic simulation carried out in ANSYS High-Frequency Structural Simulator (ANSYS Inc., Canonsburg, Pennsylvania). A frequency range of 1–200 GHz was selected and the substrate was made sufficiently small to avoid substrate-moding effects. A wave-port de-embedding was employed to set the reference plane of the simulation to that of the experimental measurement. The CPW feedline cross-section and silver electrodes were made identical to the fabricated structures and a 35-nm gap was selected for the active memristor region. For ON-state simulations, a small rectangular silver filament was used to short the gap. The conductivity of the silver was reduced by a factor of three from its bulk value to account for nanoscale effects43. The thickness and width of the filament were varied to study the impact of the filament dimension on the ON-state resistance.
The predicted OFF-state transmission appears in Fig. 8a. At 40 GHz, the predicted isolation is 31 dB, which is within 1 dB of the measured value (30 dB) as shown in Fig. 5. Moreover, the predicted isolation remains better than 17 dB to 200 GHz. The OFF-state capacitance was calculated as COFF=–imag{1/Y12}/ω. The result is plotted in Fig. 8b. Over a broad range of frequencies, the predicted capacitance is 1.17 fF, which is consistent with both hand calculations and measurement. Moreover, the frequency independence of the extracted capacitance validates our use of the simple lumped element equivalent circuit.
The simulated transmission of the ON-state device is shown in Fig. 8c for filaments with cross-sections of 110 nm × 70 nm and 50 nm × 10 nm. The average experimentally obtained insertion loss value (0.33 dB) corresponds to a nanofilament of cross-section 8 × 10−12 cm2, which is significantly smaller than expected based on SEM imaging. This indicates that a significant component of the RF resistance may be related to contact resistance. The corresponding ON-state resistance is plotted versus frequency in Fig. 8d.
The memristive RF switch requires no power to maintain the ON or OFF state, potentially leading to power efficiency advantages. The low programming voltage enables monolithic integration of memristive RF switches with low-power CMOS circuits to expand the functionality. The device fabrication process for our memristive RF switches is also simpler as compared with other devices. Further scaling of the device, such as shrinking the gap size, will lead to optimized switching behaviour such as longer endurance and lower power consumption44,45 with no degradation to the RF performance, provided the ON-state resistance is dominated by the filament and not other effects. It is necessary to engineer the location and geometry of the metallic filaments for even lower ON-state resistance, to enhance the device endurance, and to reduce the energy required for each switching event. Nonetheless, we believe that memristive RF switches will become one of the leading contenders in RF circuits for communication and consumer electronics.
Methods
Device geometry and fabrication
The memristive RF switches were built on an intrinsic silicon wafer (resistivity>10,000 Ω cm) with a 380-nm-thick thermally grown oxide. The fabrication procedure involved three major steps that defined the microscale contact pads, the CPW structure and the nanoscale gap. The microscale features were patterned by photolithography using 365-nm wavelength ultraviolet radiation, and the nanogap was defined using EBL. The padframe and feedline structures consisted of a 10-nm-thick Ti adhesion layer and a 140-nm-thick gold layer, both deposited in an electron beam evaporator. The distance between the central electrodes was 5 μm. The contact pads were made of 1-μm-thick Cu and 500-nm-thick Al that were deposited by RF magnetron sputtering. Before fabricating the nanometre-scale gap, a rectangular window of 30 μm by 8 μm was opened by EBL in the centre area of the electrodes. The nanogap was created by evaporating 70-nm-thick Ag with a tilted angle. For the 35-nm gap, the evaporation angle was 65° relative to the wafer surface. See Supplementary Note 1 for the detailed fabrication procedure and schematics.
DC programming
The devices were programmed to the ON- or OFF-state with quasi-DC voltage sweeps using a Keithley 4200SC semiconductor parameter analyser. A current compliance was set to protect the device, and to control the size and morphology of the metallic filament. During the programming, the inert metal electrode was grounded and the silver electrode was biased. A positive voltage will SET the device to a low resistance by bridging the nanogap, while a negative voltage ruptures the filament and RESETs the device to the high-resistance state.
RF measurements
Small-signal measurements were carried out ON-wafer using an Agilent N5247A VNA with a pair of N5260 frequency extender modules, permitting measurements to be carried out from 0.01 to 110 GHz. To minimize substrate-moding when measuring the OFF-state-scattering parameters, the switches were first singulated to a size of ∼1 mm × 1 mm × 0.55 mm (length × width × height) and then mounted using photo-resist on a rigid absorber composed of carbon-loaded epoxy.
For small-signal measurements, the RF power was set to a nominal level of −5 dBm. A multiline TRL calibration was carried out from 10 to 110 GHz using a set of standards fabricated on an identical substrate as the memristive switches (further details are provided in the Supplementary Note 4). The multiline TRL calibration41,42 placed the measurement reference plane 5 μm from the edge of the intrinsic device. No additional de-embedding was employed. A second calibration using the LRM+ algorithm carried out on a Cascade 104-783 calibration substrate was employed to measure the devices, referenced at the plane of the bondpads so that a comparison of the ON-state device to a thru line could be made (Supplementary Fig. 9 and Supplementary Note 8). All calibrations were performed using Cascade WinCal software (Cascade Microtech Inc., Beaverton, Oregon), before device measurement, allowing for data at the two reference planes to be acquired simultaneously. Scattering parameters were collected for each device in both the ON- and OFF-states, and parameter extraction was carried out to determine the ON- and OFF-state equivalent circuit models. Two-tone linearity measurements were carried out at 5 GHz with a 1-MHz-tone spacing and a swept power level ranging from −30 to +7 dBm. Power handling was evaluated in the ON- and OFF-states by driving the memristor with a laboratory CW source (Agilent PSG8257D) and measuring the output power using a spectrum analyser (Agilent N9010A). The power was swept from −20 to +21 dBm, with steps of 1 dBm for three different frequencies including 10 MHz, 100 MHz and 1 GHz. All cable losses were determined and de-embedded. The detailed evolution of one ON-state and one OFF-state device was studied by incrementally capturing SEM images as the devices were gradually exposed to higher RF power levels. For this experiment the RF power swept from −3 to 21 dBm with steps of 4 dBm and the frequency was set to 5 GHz. SEM photos were obtained at each step.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Pi, S. et al. Nanoscale memristive radiofrequency switches. Nat. Commun. 6:7519 doi: 10.1038/ncomms8519 (2015).
References
Brown, E. R. RF-MEMS switches for reconfigurable integrated circuits. IEEE Trans. Microw. Theor. Techn. 46, 1868–1880 (1998).
Griffith, D. J. Introduction to Electrodynamics Prentice Hall (1999).
Yao, J. J. RF MEMS from a device perspective. J. Micromech. Microeng. 10, R9–R38 (2000).
Rebeiz, G. M. RF MEMS: Theory, Design and Technology John Wiley & Sons (2003).
Rebeiz, G. M. et al. Tuning in to RF MEMS. IEEE Microw. Mag. 10, 55–72 (2009).
El-Hinnawy, N. et al. In Compound Semiconductor Integrated Circuit Symposium (CSICS) 2013 IEEE, 1–4 (Monterey, CA, USA, 2013).
Wang, M., Shim, Y. & Rais-Zadeh, M. A low-loss directly heated two-port RF phase change switch. IEEE Electron Dev. Lett. 34, 491–493 (2014).
Moon, J., Seo, H. & Le, D. In Microwave Symposium Digest 2014 IEEE MTT-S Int., 1–3 (Tampa, FL, USA, 2014).
Hillman, C. et al. In Microwave Symposium Digest 2014 IEEE MTT-S Int., 1–4 (Tampa, FL, USA, 2014).
Morin, F. J. Oxides which show a metal-to-insulator transition at the Neel temperature. Phys. Rev. Lett. 3, 34–36 (1959).
Mott, N. F. & Friedman, L. Metal-insulator transition in VO2, Ti2O3 and Ti2-xVxO3. Philos. Mag. 30, 389–402 (1974).
Chua, L Memristor-the missing circuit element. IEEE Trans. Circ. Theor. 18, 507–519 (1971).
Strukov, D. B., Snider, G., Stewart, D. & Williams, R. S. The missing memristor found. Nature 453, 80–83 (2008).
Waser, R. & Aono, M. Nanoionics-based resistive switching memories. Nat. Mater. 6, 833–840 (2007).
Yang, J. J. et al. Memristive switching mechanism for metal/oxide/metal nanodevices. Nat. Nanotech. 3, 429–433 (2008).
Yang, J. J., Strukov, D. B. & Stewart, D. R. Memristive devices for computing. Nat. Nanotech. 8, 13–24 (2013).
Pickett, M.D. & Williams, R. S. Sub-100 fJ and sub-nanosecond thermally driven threshold switching in niobium oxide crosspoint nanodevices. Nanotechnology 23, 215202 (2012).
Torrezan, A.C., Strachan, J. P., Medeiros-Ribeiro, G. & Williams, R. S. Sub-nanosecond switching of a tantalum oxide memristor. Nanotechnology 22, 485203 (2011).
Lee, M-J. et al. A fast, high-endurance and scalable non-volatile memory device made from asymmetric Ta2O5−x/TaO2−x bilayer structures. Nat. Mater. 10, 625–630 (2011).
Szot, K., Speier, W., Bihlmayer, G. & Waser, R. Switching the electrical resistance of individual dislocations in single-crystalline SrTiO3. Nat. Mater. 5, 312–320 (2006).
Govoreanu, B. et al. Electron Devices Meeting (IEDM) 2011 IEEE Int. 31.6.1–31.6.4 (Washington, DC, USA, 2011).
Pi, S., Lin, P. & Xia, Q. Cross point arrays of 8 nm x 8 nm memristive devices fabricated with nanoimprint lithography. J. Vac. Sci. Technol. B 31, 06FA02 (2013).
Baek, I. G. et al. Electron Devices Meeting2005, IEDM Technical Digest, IEEE Int. 750–753 (Washington, DC, USA, 2005).
Kozicki, M. N., Park, M. & Mitkova, M. Nanoscale memory elements based on solid-state electrolytes. IEEE Trans. Nanotech. 4, 331–338 (2005).
Xia, Q. et al. Memristor-CMOS hybrid integrated circuits for reconfigurable logic. Nano Lett. 9, 3640–3645 (2009).
Borghetti, J. et al. ‘Memristive’ switches enable ‘stateful’ logic operations via material implication. Nature 464, 873–876 (2010).
Jo, S. H. et al. Nanoscale memristor device as synapse in neuromorphic systems. Nano Lett. 10, 1297–1301 (2010).
Nessel, J. A. et al. in Microwave Symposium Digest, 2008 IEEE MTT-S Int. 1051–1054 (Atlanta, GA, USA, (2008).
Shim, Y., Hummel, G. & Rais-Zadeh, M. In Conference on Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS). IEEE 26th Int. 237–240 (Taipei, Taiwan, (2013).
Kohman, G. T., Hermance, H. W. & Downes, G. H. Silver migration in electrical insulation. Bell Syst. Tech. J. 34, 1115–1147 (1955).
Yang, Y. et al. Observation of conducting filament growth in nanoscale resistive memories. Nat. Commun. 3, 732 (2012).
Yang, Y. et al. Electrochemical dynamics of nanoscale metallic inclusions in dielectrics. Nat. Commun. 5, 4232 (2014).
Arrhenius, S. A. Über die dissociationswärme und den einflusß der temperatur auf den dissociationsgrad der elektrolyte. Z. Phys. Chem. 4, 96–116 (1889).
McBrayer, J. D., Swanson, R. M. & Signmon, T. W. Diffusion of metals in silicon oxide. J. Electrochem. Soc. 133, 1242–1246 (1986).
Hummel, R. E. & Geier, H. J. Activation energy for electrotransport in thin silver and gold films. Thin Solid Films 25, 335–342 (1975).
Neumann, G. & Neumann, G. M. In Diffusion Monograph Series: Surface Self-Diffusion of Metals (ed. Wo¨hlbier F. H. 57Diffusion Information Center (1972).
Kim, H. C., Alford, T. L. & Alle, D. R. Thickness dependence on the thermal stability of silver thin films. Appl. Phys. Lett. 81, 4287–4289 (2002).
Sun, H. et al. Direct observation of conversion between threshold switching and memory switching induced by conductive filament morphology. Adv. Funct. Mater. 24, 5679–5686 (2014).
Waser, R., Dittmann, R., Staikov, G. & Szot, K. Redox-based resistive switching memories – nanoionic mechanisms, prospects, and challenges. Adv. Mater. 21, 2632–2663 (2009).
Tappertzhofen, S. et al. Generic relevance of counter charges for cation-based nanoscale resistive switching memories. ACS Nano 7, 6396–6402 (2013).
Marks, R. B. A multiline method of network analyzer calibration. IEEE Trans.Microw. Theor. Tech. 39, 1205–1215 (1991).
Williams, D. F., Wang, C. M. & Arz, U. Microwave Symposium Digest, 2003 IEEE MTT-S Int. 1819–1822 (Philadelphia, PA, USA, (2003).
Bid, A., Achyut, B. & Raychaudhuri, A. K. Temperature dependence of the resistance of metallic nanowires of diameter ≥ 15nm: applicability of Bloch-Grüneisen theorem. Phys. Rev. B 74, 035426 (2006).
Terabe, K., Hasegawa, T., Nakayama, T. & Aono, M. Quantized conductance atomic switch. Nature 433, 47–50 (2005).
Zhirnov, V. V., Meade, R., Cavin, R. K. & Sandhu, G. Scaling limits of resistive memories. Nanotechnology 22, 254027 (2011).
Acknowledgements
This work is supported in part by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA; N66001-12-1-4217; N66001-11-1-4143), the National Science Foundation (NSF; ECCS-1253073) and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR; FA9550-12-1-0038). Part of the device fabrication was conducted in the clean room of Center for Hierarchical Manufacturing (CHM), an NSF Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC) located at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. We thank Peng Lin for growing the thermal oxide on the intrinsic silicon wafers and preparing cross-sectional SEM imaging samples using a focused ion beam (FIB) microscope; Robert Jackson, William Chappell and Roy Olsson for discussion; and J. Joshua Yang and Sigfrid Yngvesson for critical comments on the manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Q.X. and J.C.B. conceived the idea. Q.X. and S.P. designed and fabricated the device, and did the DC measurements and programming. J.C.B. and M.G.-S. measured and modelled the RF performance. Q.X. and J.C.B. wrote the main text, all authors wrote the Supplementary Information and commented on the entire manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figures 1-9, Supplementary Notes 1-8 and Supplementary References (PDF 1217 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Pi, S., Ghadiri-Sadrabadi, M., Bardin, J. et al. Nanoscale memristive radiofrequency switches. Nat Commun 6, 7519 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8519
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8519
This article is cited by
-
Emerging memory electronics for non-volatile radiofrequency switching technologies
Nature Reviews Electrical Engineering (2024)
-
Nonlinear restructuring of patterned thin films by residual stress engineering into out-of-plane wavy-shaped electrostatic microactuators for high-performance radio-frequency switches
Microsystems & Nanoengineering (2023)
-
Parallel in-memory wireless computing
Nature Electronics (2023)
-
Planar CBRAM devices using non-cleanroom techniques as RF switches
Applied Physics A (2023)
-
Nonlinear mode saturation in a U-shaped micro-resonator
Scientific Reports (2022)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.