Biomaterial-Induced Stable Resistive Switching Mechanism in TiO2 Thin Films: The Role of Active Interstitial Sites/Ions in Minimum Current Leakage and Superior Bioactivity

Leakage of current in oxide layers is the main issue for higher speed and denser resistive random-access memory. Defect engineering played a substantial role in meeting this challenge by doping or producing controlled interstitial defects or active sites. These controlled active sites enabled memory...

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Published inACS omega Vol. 5; no. 30; pp. 19050 - 19060
Main Authors Abbasi, Misbah Sehar, Irshad, Muhammad Sultan, Arshad, Naila, Ahmed, Iftikhar, Idrees, Muhammad, Ahmad, Shafiq, Wei, Zhou, Sharaf, Mohamed, Al Firdausi, Muhammad Dzulqarnain
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published American Chemical Society 04.08.2020
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Summary:Leakage of current in oxide layers is the main issue for higher speed and denser resistive random-access memory. Defect engineering played a substantial role in meeting this challenge by doping or producing controlled interstitial defects or active sites. These controlled active sites enabled memory cells to form a stable and reproducible conduction filament following an electrochemical metallization model. In this study, a defect-abundant lime peel extract (LPE)-mediated anatase TiO2 thin film was fabricated using a simple hydrothermal route. The detailed structural and morphological analysis of the bioactive anatase TiO2-LPE thin film reveals the homogeneous growth of TiO2 flowers and distinct features in terms of controlled defects as compared to simple anatase TiO2. These interstitial defects (Ti+3 and Ti+4) behave as active sites for cation migrations along highly conductive K1+ ions because of the mediation of LPE. The defect-free surface reveals slight surface roughness (4.8 nm) that successfully minimizes leakage of current. The strategy enabled a reliable conductive bridge filament, which can replicate with no more electric degradation. The Ag/TiO2-LPE/FTO-based memory cell demonstrates reproducible bipolar resistive switching along with a high ON/OFF ratio (>105), excellent endurance (1.5 × 103 cycles), and long-term retention (105 s) without any electrical degradation. Furthermore, green-synthesized TiO2-LPE nanoparticles have shown superior antibacterial activity as compared to other green syntheses of different plants or fruits against the toxic microorganisms present in inorganic media.
ISSN:2470-1343
2470-1343
DOI:10.1021/acsomega.0c02410