Low-energy compute-in-memory architectures promise to reduce the energy demand for computation and data storage. Wurtzite- type ferroelectrics are promising options for both performance and integration with existing semiconductor processes. The Al1-xScxN alloy is among the few tetrahedral materials that exhibit polarization switching, but the electric field required to switch the polarization is too high (few MV/cm). Going beyond binary com- pounds, we explore the search space of multinary wurtzite-type compounds. Through this large-scale search, we identify four prom- ising ternary nitrides and oxides, including Mg2PN3, MgSiN2, Li2SiO3, and Li2GeO3, for future experimental realization and engi- neering. In >90% of the considered multinary materials, we identify unique switching pathways and non-polar structures that are distinct from the commonly assumed switching mechanism in AlN-based materials. Our results disprove the existing design principle based on the reduction of the wurtzite c/a lattice parameter ratio when comparing different chemistries while sup- porting two emerging design principles—ionicity and bond strength.
more »
« less
Switching it up: New mechanisms revealed in wurtzite-type ferroelectrics
Wurtzite-type ferroelectrics have drawn increasing attention due to the promise of better performance and integration than traditional oxide ferroelectrics with semiconductors such as Si, SiC, and III-V compounds. However, wurtzite-type ferroelectrics generally require enormous electric fields, approaching breakdown, to reverse their polarization. The underlying switching mechanism(s), especially for multinary compounds and alloys, remains elusive. Here, we examine the switching behaviors in Al1−xScxN alloys and wurtzite-type multinary candidate compounds we recently computationally identified. We find that switching in these tetrahedrally coordinated materials proceeds via a variety of nonpolar intermediate structures and that switching barriers are dominated by the more-electronegative cations. For Al1−xScxN alloys, we find that the switching pathway changes from a collective mechanism to a lower-barrier mechanism enabled by inversion of individual tetrahedra with increased Sc composition. Our findings provide insights for future engineering and realization of wurtzite-type materials and open a door to understanding domain motion.
more »
« less
- Award ID(s):
- 2119281
- PAR ID:
- 10509848
- Publisher / Repository:
- Science
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Science Advances
- Volume:
- 10
- Issue:
- 20
- ISSN:
- 2375-2548
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
More Like this
-
-
AlN-based alloys find widespread application in high-power microelectronics, optoelectronics, and electromechanics. The realization of ferroelectricity in wurtzite AlN-based heterostructural alloys has opened up the possibility of directly integrating ferroelectrics with conventional microelectronics based on tetrahedral semiconductors, such as Si, SiC, and III–Vs, enabling compute-in-memory architectures, high-density data storage, and more. The discovery of AlN-based wurtzite ferroelectrics has been driven to date by chemical intuition and empirical explorations. Here, we demonstrate the computationally-guided discovery and experimental demonstration of new ferroelectric wurtzite Al1−xGdxN alloys. First-principles calculations indicate that the minimum energy pathway for switching changes from a collective to an individual switching process with a lower overall energy barrier, at a rare-earth fraction x with x > 0.10–0.15. Experimentally, ferroelectric switching is observed at room temperature in Al1−xGdxN films with x > 0.12, which strongly supports the switching mechanisms in wurtzite ferroelectrics proposed previously [Lee et al., Sci. Adv. 10, eadl0848 (2024)]. This is also the first demonstration of ferroelectricity in an AlN-based alloy with a magnetic rare-earth element, which could pave the way for additional functionalities such as multiferroicity and opto-ferroelectricity in this exciting class of AlN-based materials.more » « less
-
Ferroelectricity enables key modern technologies from non-volatile memory to precision ultrasound. The first known wurtzite ferroelectric Al 1− x Sc x N has recently attracted attention because of its robust ferroelectricity and Si process compatibility, but the chemical and structural origins of ferroelectricity in wurtzite materials are not yet fully understood. Here we show that ferroelectric behavior in wurtzite nitrides has local chemical rather than extended structural origin. According to our coupled experimental and computational results, the local bond ionicity and ionic displacement, rather than simply the change in the lattice parameter of the wurtzite structure, is key to controlling the macroscopic ferroelectric response in these materials. Across gradients in composition and thickness of 0 < x < 0.35 and 140–260 nm, respectively, in combinatorial thin films of Al 1− x Sc x N, the pure wurtzite phase exhibits a similar c / a ratio regardless of the Sc content due to elastic interaction with neighboring crystals. The coercive field and spontaneous polarization significantly decrease with increasing Sc content despite this invariant c / a ratio. This property change is due to the more ionic bonding nature of Sc–N relative to the more covalent Al–N bonds, and the local displacement of the neighboring Al atoms caused by Sc substitution, according to DFT calculations. Based on these insights, ionicity engineering is introduced as an approach to reduce coercive field of Al 1− x Sc x N for memory and other applications and to control ferroelectric properties in other wurtzites.more » « less
-
Abstract The piezoelectric and ferroelectric applications of heterovalent ternary materials are not well explored. Epitaxial MgSiN2films are grown at 600 °C on (111)Pt//(001)Al2O3substrates by the reactive sputtering method using metallic Mg and Si under the N2atmosphere. Detailed X‐ray diffraction measurements and transmission electron microscopy observations revealed that the epitaxially grown films on the substrates have a hexagonal wurtzite structure withc‐axis out‐of‐plane orientation. The random occupation of this structure by Mg and Si differs from that of the previously reported structure in which these two cations periodically occupy the cationic sites. However, the lattice spacings closely approximate those that are previously reported, irrespective of the ordering, and they are almost comparable with those of (Al0.8Sc0.2)N. The wide bandgap of >5.0 eV in deposited MgSiN2is compatible with that of AlN and suggests durability against the application of strong external electric fields, possibly to induce polarization switching. In addition, MgSiN2is shown to have piezoelectric properties with an effectived33value of 2.3 pm V−1for the first time. This work demonstrates the compositional expansion of hexagonal wurtzite to heterovalent ternary nitrides for novel piezoelectric materials, whose ferroelectricity is expected.more » « less
-
III-nitrides and related alloys are widely used for optoelectronics and as acoustic resonators. Ferroelectric wurtzite nitrides are of particular interest because of their potential for direct integration with Si and wide bandgap semiconductors and unique polarization switching characteristics; such interest has taken off since the first report of ferroelectric Al1−xScxN alloys. However, the coercive fields needed to switch polarization are on the order of MV/cm, which are 1–2 orders of magnitude larger than oxide perovskite ferroelectrics. Atomic-scale point defects are known to impact the dielectric properties, including breakdown fields and leakage currents, as well as ferroelectric switching. However, very little is known about the native defects and impurities in Al1−xScxN and their effect on the dielectric and ferroelectric properties. In this study, we use first-principles calculations to determine the formation energetics of native defects and unintentional oxygen incorporation and their effects on the polarization switching barriers in Al1−xScxN alloys. We find that nitrogen vacancies are the dominant native defects, and unintentional oxygen incorporation on the nitrogen site is present in high concentrations. They introduce multiple mid-gap states that can lead to premature dielectric breakdown and increased temperature-activated leakage currents in ferroelectrics. We also find that nitrogen vacancy and substitutional oxygen reduce the switching barrier in Al1−xScxN at low Sc compositions. The effect is minimal or even negative (increases barrier) at higher Sc compositions. Unintentional defects are generally considered to adversely affect ferroelectric properties, but our findings reveal that controlled introduction of point defects by tuning synthesis conditions can instead benefit polarization switching in ferroelectric Al1−xScxN at certain compositions.more » « less
An official website of the United States government

