Nitrogen Vacancies Induce Fatigue in Ferroelectric Al0.93B0.07N.


Journal article


Walter Smith, Betul Akkopru‐Akgun, Erdem Ozdemir, Bogdan Dryzhakov, J. Hayden, Jon-Paul Maria, Kyle P. Kelley, Clive A. Randall, S. Trolier-McKinstry, T. Beechem
ACS Nano, 2025

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APA   Click to copy
Smith, W., Akkopru‐Akgun, B., Ozdemir, E., Dryzhakov, B., Hayden, J., Maria, J.-P., … Beechem, T. (2025). Nitrogen Vacancies Induce Fatigue in Ferroelectric Al0.93B0.07N. ACS Nano.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Smith, Walter, Betul Akkopru‐Akgun, Erdem Ozdemir, Bogdan Dryzhakov, J. Hayden, Jon-Paul Maria, Kyle P. Kelley, Clive A. Randall, S. Trolier-McKinstry, and T. Beechem. “Nitrogen Vacancies Induce Fatigue in Ferroelectric Al0.93B0.07N.” ACS Nano (2025).


MLA   Click to copy
Smith, Walter, et al. “Nitrogen Vacancies Induce Fatigue in Ferroelectric Al0.93B0.07N.” ACS Nano, 2025.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{walter2025a,
  title = {Nitrogen Vacancies Induce Fatigue in Ferroelectric Al0.93B0.07N.},
  year = {2025},
  journal = {ACS Nano},
  author = {Smith, Walter and Akkopru‐Akgun, Betul and Ozdemir, Erdem and Dryzhakov, Bogdan and Hayden, J. and Maria, Jon-Paul and Kelley, Kyle P. and Randall, Clive A. and Trolier-McKinstry, S. and Beechem, T.}
}

Abstract

Wurtzite ferroelectrics (e.g., Al0.93B0.07N) are being explored for high-temperature and emerging near- or in-compute memory architectures due to the material advantages offered by their large remanent polarization and robust chemical stability. Despite these advantages, current Al0.93B0.07N devices do not have sufficient endurance lifetime to meet roadmap targets. To identify the defects responsible for this limited endurance, a combination of electronic measurements and optical spectroscopies characterized the evolution of defect states within Al0.93B0.07N with cycling. Ultrathin (∼10 nm) metal contacts were used to optically probe regions subject to ferroelectric switching; photoluminescence spectroscopy identified the emergence of a transition near 2.1 eV whose intensity scaled with the nonswitching polarization quantified via positive-up negative-down (PUND) measurements. Accompanying thermally stimulated depolarization current and modulus spectroscopy measurements also observed the strengthening of a state near 2.1 eV. The origin of this feature is ascribed to transitions between a nitrogen vacancy and another defect deeper in the bandgap. Recognizing that the impurity concentration is largely fixed, strengthening of this transition indicates an increase in the number of nitrogen vacancies. Switching, therefore, creates vacancies in Al0.93B0.07N likely due to hot-atom damage induced by the aggressive fields necessary to switch wurtzite materials that ultimately limits endurance.