Our recent paper (2025) has been published in Nature Communications by Springer Nature Publishing!
S. Cheng*, H. Navarro*, Z. Wang, X. Li, J. Kaur, A. Pofelski, Q. Meng, C. Zhou, C. Chen, M. P. M. Dean, M. Liu, A. C. Basaran, M. Rozenberg, S. P. Ong, I. K. Schuller, Y. Zhu, Purely electronic insulator-metal transition in rutile VO2. Nature Communications 16, 5444 (2025). *equally contribution. Article Link.
Volatile resistive switching in neuromorphic computing can be tuned by external stimuli such as temperature or electric-field. However, this type of switching is generally coupled to structural changes, resulting in slower reaction speed and higher energy consumption when incorporated into an electronic device. The vanadium dioxide (VO2), which has near room temperature metal-insulator transition (MIT), is an archetypical volatile resistive switching system. Here, we demonstrate an isostructural MIT in an ultrathin VO2 film capped with a photoconductive cadmium sulfide (CdS) layer. Transmission electron microscopy, resistivity experiments, and first-principles calculations show that the hole carriers induced by CdS photovoltaic effect are driving the MIT in rutile VO2. The insulating-rutile VO2 phase has been proved and can remain stable for hours. Our finding provides a new approach to produce purely electronically driven MIT in VO2, and widens its applications in fast-response, low-energy neuromorphic devices.
Our recent paper (2022) has been selected as an Editor’s Suggestion by American Physical Society Publishing!
R. Rocco, J. del Valle, H. Navarro, P. Salev, I. K. Schuller, M. Rozenberg, Exponential Escape Rate of Filamentary Incubation in Mott Spiking Neurons. Physical Review Applied 17, 024028 (2022). Article Link.
Our recent paper (2021) has been selected as an Editor’s Pick and featured on the cover of the April issue by American Institute of Physics Publishing!
H. Navarro, J. d. Valle, Y. Kalcheim, N. M. Vargas, C. Adda, M.-H. Lee, P. Lapa, A. Rivera-Calzada, I. A. Zaluzhnyy, E. Qiu, O. Shpyrko, M. Rozenberg, A. Frano, I. K. Schuller, A hybrid optoelectronic Mott insulator. Applied Physics Letters 118, 141901 (2021). Article Link.
The coupling of electronic degrees of freedom in materials to create “hybridized functionalities” is a holy grail of modern condensed matter physics that may produce versatile mechanisms of control. Correlated electron systems often exhibit coupled degrees of freedom with a high degree of tunability which sometimes lead to hybridized functionalities based on external stimuli. However, the mechanisms of tunability and the sensitivity to external stimuli are determined by intrinsic material properties which are not always controllable. A Mott metal-insulator transition (MIT) is technologically attractive due to the large changes in resistance, tunable by doping, strain, electric fields, and orbital occupancy but not, in and of itself, controllable with light. Here, an alternate approach is presented to produce optical functionalities using a properly engineered photoconductor/strongly correlated hybrid heterostructure. This approach combines a photoconductor, which does not exhibit an MIT, with a strongly correlated oxide, which is not photoconducting. Due to the intimate proximity between the two materials, the heterostructure exhibits giant volatile and nonvolatile, photoinduced resistivity changes with substantial shifts in the MIT transition temperatures. This approach can be extended to other judicious combinations of strongly correlated materials.