Open Access Article
J. M. Song
ab,
L. H. Luoc,
X. H. Daia,
A. Y. Songa,
Y. Zhoua,
Z. N. Lia,
J. T. Lianga and
B. T. Liu*a
aHebei Key Lab of Optic-Electronic Information and Materials, College of Physics Science & Technology, Hebei University, Baoding 071002, China. E-mail: btliu@hbu.cn
bCollege of Science, Agriculture University of Hebei, Baoding 071001, China
cCollege of Science, Ningbo University, Ningbo 315211, China
First published on 24th January 2018
La0.5Sr0.5CoO3/Na0.5Bi0.5TiO3/La0.5Sr0.5CoO3 (LSCO/NBT/LSCO) ferroelectric capacitors have been successfully fabricated on (001) SrTiO3 substrate, in which the LSCO film is prepared by magnetron sputtering and the NBT film by pulsed laser deposition. Both X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy techniques confirm that the (001) oriented LSCO/NBT/LSCO heterostructure is epitaxially grown on SrTiO3 substrate. The remnant polarization, coercive field and relative dielectric constant of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor, measured at 250 kV cm−1, are 15.6 μC cm−2, 47 kV cm−1 and 559, respectively. Moreover, the capacitor possesses very good fatigue-resistance, and less pulse width dependence as well as piezoelectric properties (d33 = 145 pm V−1). It is found that the leakage current density of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor meets well with ohmic conduction behavior at applied fields lower than 55 kV cm−1 and bulk-limited space charge-limited conduction at the fields higher than 55 kV cm−1.
:
O2 = 3
:
1, power = 30 W. Post-annealing was conducted at 550 °C in a 1 atm oxygen-flowing tube furnace. Step 2: Na0.5Bi0.5TiO3 target with 10% excessive bismuth and 10% sodium was used during deposition to compensate the loss of bismuth and sodium due to the strong volatility of bismuth and sodium. 250 nm-thick NBT film was further deposited on the LSCO/STO heterostructure by pulsed laser deposition at 550 °C and 7.5 Pa oxygen deposition pressure. The target and substrate distance was 4.5 cm; the laser energy density and repetition rate were 2 J cm−2 and 5 Hz, respectively. Step 3: 60 nm-thick LSCO film and 70 nm thick Pt were sequentially deposited by magnetron sputtering on the surface of the NBT/LSCO/STO heterostructure through a shadow mask to get 7.85 × 10−5 cm2 circular pads as the top electrodes of the capacitors. The Pt film is used to improve the electrical contact between the measurement tip and LSCO. The Pt/LSCO/NBT/LSCO/STO heterostructure was further annealed at 550 °C in an oxygen-flowing tube furnace in order to make the as-grown top LSCO film crystallized. The crystallinity and phase of the sample was characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and the cross-sectional interfaces of NBT/LSCO/STO heterostructure were investigated using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The ferroelectric properties and leakage current behavior of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor were studied using a precision LC unit from Radiant Technologies. The dielectric and piezoelectric properties were measured using an Agilent 4294A and piezoresponse force microscope (PFM-Asylum Research), respectively.
A typical ferroelectric hysteresis loop of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor, measured at 250 kV cm−1 bias electric field and 1 kHz frequency using capacitive method, is illustrated in Fig. 2(a). A saturated ferroelectric loop can be obtained with a remnant polarization, 15.6 μC cm−2, and a small coercive field, 47 kV cm−1. The inset at the top left-hand side of Fig. 2(a) is the phase PFM images, which recorded for sample NBT after square areas of (7 × 7 μm2) and (4 × 4 μm2) have been polarized (black region) and reverse polarized (white region) by applying bias electric field −250 kV cm−1 and 250 kV cm−1, respectively. We can see the polarization switching within these domains as square areas defined by black and white contrasts, characteristic of each orientation of the polarization can be observed. This means that (001) epitaxial NBT thin film has good reversal memory properties. The switchable polarization, ΔP, is defined as the difference between the switched (P*) and nonswitched (P^) polarization. The inset at the bottom right-hand side of Fig. 2(a) demonstrates the relation of switchable polarization with applied electric field. We can see that the switchable polarization increases rapidly with the increase of the applied electric field, and it is saturated when the applied electric field is greater than 100 kV cm−1. Fig. 2(b) shows the pulse width dependence of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor measured at bias electric field 250 kV cm−1 with a pulse delay time of 1 s. It can be seen that the switchable polarization slightly increases with the increase of the pulse width, which is favorable to the high speed ferroelectric memories. In addition, fatigue is also an important parameter to characterize ferroelectric film for ferroelectric memories. In this experiment, the fatigue characteristic of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor was tested at bias electric field 250 kV cm−1 and 1 MHz frequency with a pulse delay time of 1 s. As shown in Fig. 2(c), no obvious degradation can be found from the polarizations of the capacitor up to 1010 switching cycles. The inset of Fig. 2(c) presents the hysteresis loops before and after the fatigue test, in which no obvious difference can be found from the hysteresis loops, further indicating that the epitaxial LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor has very good fatigue resistance characteristic. Fig. 2(d) demonstrates the relation of dielectric constant and loss tangent with applied electric field for the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor at a frequency of 10 kHz. The tunability of 50.1% at the maximum applied field of 250 kV cm−1 is obtained, in which the tunability is defined19
![]() | (1) |
In formula (1), εmin is the minimum value of the dielectric constant at the maximum applied field, εmax is the maximum value of the dielectric constant at the applied field of 0 kV cm−1. The dielectric constant and dielectric loss of the (001) epitaxial NBT film measured at 10 kHz are 559 and 0.19, respectively.
To understand the local switching behavior of the NBT thin films in ferroelectrics, the piezoresponse force microscope PFM (Asylum Research, Cypher, American) was used to characterize piezoelectric properties of the NBT film. Since the effective piezoelectric coefficient d33 can reflect the most essential piezoelectric effect of piezoelectric film material.20 Measurement of d33 was achieved by keeping the PFM tip fixed above the local point of NBT film and applying an electric field from −500 to 500 kV cm−1, while recording the piezoresponse signal amplitude (A) and applied field (E). In the measurements, a bias voltage of 800 mV and a resonance frequency of 320 Hz were applied on the conductive test probe. According to the law of the converse piezoelectric effect, the relationship between amplitude (A) and applied field (E) can be described as follows:21
![]() | (2) |
In formula (2), d is the initial thickness of the films before deformation, A0 and E0 are the piezoelectric deformation and electric field of the intersection, respectively. The piezoelectric hysteresis loop (d33–E) of NBT film is calculated from the A–E curve based on eqn (1). Fig. 3(a) and (b) displays the corresponding piezoelectric phase–electric field loop and typical piezoelectric response butterfly loop. In the piezoelectric phase electric field loop, the film exhibits a significant 180° domain flip. As can be seen, a typical well-shaped A–E “butterfly” loop is obtained with a amplitude maximum of 1.82 nm appearing at 475 kV cm−1. This result shows a strain as high as ∼0.7% (A/d) and indicates that the (00l) orientation of the epitaxial NBT film has a very good piezoelectricity. In addition, at −205 kV cm−1, the d33 piezoelectric coefficients reached the 145 pm V−1, which is relative higher than the reported NBT-based films.22–24
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| Fig. 3 Piezoelectricity of the NBT film obtained by PFM. (a) Phase loop of the NBT film. (b) Ferroelectric butterfly loop and the corresponding piezoelectric hysteresis loop of the NBT film. | ||
Leakage current is an important parameter of the electrical properties of ferroelectric capacitor related to thermal effect and energy loss so that minimum leakage current density is ideal for the real capacitors used in the ferroelectric memories. Four kinds of leakage mechanisms have been proposed for ferroelectric perovskite oxides: the ohmic conduction, the bulk-limited space-charge-limited conduction (SCLC), the bulk-limited Poole–Frenkel emission and the interface-limited Schottky emission.25–28 Fig. 4 shows the relationship between the leakage current density J and the electric field E for the LSCO/NBT/LSCO ferroelectric capacitor. The leakage current density at the applied electric field of 250 kV cm−1 is 3.0 × 10−3 A cm−2. The leakage current curve was re-plotted as shown in the inset at the left-hand side and the right-hand side of Fig. 4 in order to further characterize the conduction mechanisms of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor in different electric field ranges. We can see two kinds of leakage behaviors account for the leakage current characteristic of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor, and 55 kV cm−1 is the transitional point for the two different leakage current mechanisms. The inset at the left-hand side of Fig. 4 demonstrates the linear relation of log(J) versus log(E) of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor for the low electric field region, whose slope of 1.15 is close to 1.0, implying ohmic-like conduction for the low electric field region. The relation between current density and electric field for the SCLC is given by
![]() | (3) |
In formula (3), J is the current density, E is electric field, μ is the magnetic permeability, ε is the permittivity, d is film thickness. Regarding high field region, a straight line can be yielded using the relation of J versus E2, as shown in the inset at the right-hand side of Fig. 4, indicating SCLC conduction accounts for the conduction of the capacitor when the applied electric field is higher than 55 kV cm−1. Big differences can be found from the leakage current behavior between LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor and Pt/NBT/Pt capacitors.17 The current density of the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor is 3.0 × 10−3 A cm−2, while it is 1.4 × 10−2 A cm−2 for the Pt/NBT/Pt capacitor measured at the same electric field of 250 kV cm−1. The J–E curves of LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor for both positive and negative applied fields are very symmetric, however, very different leakage conduction behaviors can be found for the Pt/NBT/Pt capacitor. Moreover, the leakage current behavior of the Pt/NBT/Pt capacitor is mainly attributed to the interface-limited Schottky emission for the high electric field range, which is different from the leakage conduction behavior (SCLC) for the LSCO/NBT/LSCO capacitor. This difference can be ascribed to the fact that Pt and LSCO have different intrinsic property so that different interfaces are formed at Pt/NBT and LSCO/NBT interfaces, which further impact current conduction mechanism of the resulting capacitors.29
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