Login / Signup

A Room-Temperature Ferroelectric Resonant Tunneling Diode.

Zhijun MaQi ZhangLingling TaoYihao WangDaniel SandoJinling ZhouYizhong GuoMichael LordPeng ZhouYongqi RuanZhiwei WangAlex HamiltonAlexei GruvermanEvgeny Y TsymbalTianjin ZhangNagarajan Valanoor
Published in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
Resonant tunneling is a quantum-mechanical effect in which electron transport is controlled by the discrete energy levels within a quantum-well (QW) structure. A ferroelectric resonant tunneling diode (RTD) exploits the switchable electric polarization state of the QW barrier to tune the device resistance. Here, the discovery of robust room-temperature ferroelectric-modulated resonant tunneling and negative differential resistance (NDR) behaviors in all-perovskite-oxide BaTiO 3 /SrRuO 3 /BaTiO 3 QW structures is reported. The resonant current amplitude and voltage are tunable by the switchable polarization of the BaTiO 3 ferroelectric with the NDR ratio modulated by ≈3 orders of magnitude and an OFF/ON resistance ratio exceeding a factor of 2 × 10 4 . The observed NDR effect is explained an energy bandgap between Ru-t 2g and Ru-e g orbitals driven by electron-electron correlations, as follows from density functional theory calculations. This study paves the way for ferroelectric-based quantum-tunneling devices in future oxide electronics.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • room temperature
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • quantum dots
  • ionic liquid
  • high resolution