Modulation of oxygen vacancy filaments and crystal structure by thermal annealing for high-performance solution-processed HfZrOx resistive memory

Abstract

This study demonstrates solution-processed Ti/HZO/n+-Si write-once-read-many-times (WORM) memory devices. By systematically evaluating HZO resistive switching (RS) layers annealed from 300 °C to 900 °C, we establish a direct correlation between temperature-dependent evolution of oxygen vacancies, structural crystallinity, and the resulting RS performance.XPS and XRD analyses reveal that increasing the temperature facilitates a structural transition of the HZO films from an amorphous state to a polycrystalline monoclinic phase, while reducing the oxygen vacancy concentration from 43.9% to 17.3%. Temperature-dependent measurements combined with different voltage sweep directions confirm that the RS mechanism of the memories is governed by oxygen-vacancy conductive filaments. The 700 °C-annealed device exhibits optimal performance, featuring an ultralow OFF-state current of ~10-11 A, a remarkable ON/OFF current ratio of ~107 , and high-speed switching of ~30 ns with a low programming energy of ~114.4 pJ, while maintaining robust data retention and read-disturb immunity extrapolated to safely exceed 10 years at an elevated temperature of 85 °C. This filamentary process is degraded at lower temperatures by excessive leakage paths and is completely suppressed at 900 °C due to severe vacancy reduction and the formation of a highly insulating monoclinic HfO2 phase.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Mar 2026
Accepted
21 Apr 2026
First published
22 Apr 2026

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Modulation of oxygen vacancy filaments and crystal structure by thermal annealing for high-performance solution-processed HfZrOx resistive memory

C. Hsu, Z. Qiu, X. Zhang, W. Jhang, T. Hsieh, Y. Chiang, B. Ko, W. Shen and S. Kim, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6TC00849F

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