The integration of dielectric inserts into hafnia-based ferroelectric stacks has emerged as a promising route to expand memory windows in ferroelectric NAND. However, the physical origin of the associated coercive voltage enhancement has remained unclear. Here, we resolve this long-standing question by demonstrating that coercive voltage enhancement originates from resistive voltage division between the ferroelectric and dielectric layers, governed primarily by leakage in both layers. Combining Preisach modeling, defect-based Ginestra simulations, and polarization switching experiments with external leaky dielectrics, we show that minimizing leakage in the dielectric layer - intrinsically through wide-bandgap, low-electron-affinity dielectrics or extrinsically by reducing defect densities - provides a universal design principle for coercive voltage control. Importantly, nucleation-limited switching kinetics remain unchanged across the heterostructures, confirming that the enhancement is driven by resistive voltage division rather than trap-assisted mechanisms. This discovery establishes a straightforward framework for engineering large memory windows using ferroelectric–dielectric heterostructures, thereby enabling multi-level (TLC/QLC) operation in 3D NAND. Beyond memory applications, our findings also explain the contrasting behaviors of fluorite- vs. perovskite-based ferroelectric–dielectric systems, offering fundamental guidance for interfacial materials design in next-generation electronic devices.
Materials Design Principles for Large Memory Windows: Coercive Voltage Engineering in Ferroelectric– Dielectric Heterostructures / Venkatesan, Prasanna; Jayasankar, Hari; Soliman, Salma; Ravikumar, Priyankka; Fernandes, Lance; Park, Chinsung; Garlapati, Amrit; Zhang, Chengyang; Kang, Sanghyun; Yu, Shimeng; Datta, Suman; Khan, Asif; Tian, Mengkun; Wang, Zheng; Kim, Kijoon; Seo, Kwangyou; Kim, Kwangsoo; Kim, Wanki; Ha, Daewon; Larcher, Luca; Thareja, Gaurav; Padovani, Andrea. - In: ADVANCED ELECTRONIC MATERIALS. - ISSN 2199-160X. - 12:8(2026), pp. 1-1. [10.1002/aelm.202500702]
Materials Design Principles for Large Memory Windows: Coercive Voltage Engineering in Ferroelectric– Dielectric Heterostructures
Larcher, Luca;Padovani, Andrea
2026
Abstract
The integration of dielectric inserts into hafnia-based ferroelectric stacks has emerged as a promising route to expand memory windows in ferroelectric NAND. However, the physical origin of the associated coercive voltage enhancement has remained unclear. Here, we resolve this long-standing question by demonstrating that coercive voltage enhancement originates from resistive voltage division between the ferroelectric and dielectric layers, governed primarily by leakage in both layers. Combining Preisach modeling, defect-based Ginestra simulations, and polarization switching experiments with external leaky dielectrics, we show that minimizing leakage in the dielectric layer - intrinsically through wide-bandgap, low-electron-affinity dielectrics or extrinsically by reducing defect densities - provides a universal design principle for coercive voltage control. Importantly, nucleation-limited switching kinetics remain unchanged across the heterostructures, confirming that the enhancement is driven by resistive voltage division rather than trap-assisted mechanisms. This discovery establishes a straightforward framework for engineering large memory windows using ferroelectric–dielectric heterostructures, thereby enabling multi-level (TLC/QLC) operation in 3D NAND. Beyond memory applications, our findings also explain the contrasting behaviors of fluorite- vs. perovskite-based ferroelectric–dielectric systems, offering fundamental guidance for interfacial materials design in next-generation electronic devices.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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(P. Venkatesan - AEM 12, Apr 2026) Materials Design Principles for Large Memory Windows...pdf
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