Crystal and Electronic Structure of Oxygen Vacancy Stabilized Rhombohedral Hafnium Oxide

ACS Appl Electron Mater. 2023 Jan 26;5(2):754-763. doi: 10.1021/acsaelm.2c01255. eCollection 2023 Feb 28.

Abstract

Hafnium oxide is an outstanding candidate for next-generation nonvolatile memory solutions such as OxRAM (oxide-based resistive memory) and FeRAM (ferroelectric random access memory). A key parameter for OxRAM is the controlled oxygen deficiency in HfO2-x which eventually is associated with structural changes. Here, we expand the view on the recently identified (semi-)conducting low-temperature pseudocubic phase of reduced hafnium oxide by further X-ray diffraction analysis and density functional theory (DFT) simulation and reveal its rhombohedral nature. By performing total energy and electronic structure calculations, we investigate phase stability and band structure modifications in the presence of oxygen vacancies. With increasing oxygen vacancy concentration, the material transforms from the well-known monoclinic structure to a (pseudocubic) polar rhombohedral r-HfO2-x structure. The DFT analysis shows that r-HfO2-x is not merely epitaxy-induced but may exist as a relaxed compound. Furthermore, the electronic structure of r-HfO2-x as determined by X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and UV/Vis spectroscopy corresponds very well with the DFT-based prediction of a conducting defect band. The existence of a substoichiometric (semi-)conducting phase of HfO2-x is obviously an important ingredient to understand the mechanism of resistive switching in hafnium-oxide-based OxRAM.