structure due to its ability to be designed in high capacity 3D crossbar arrays. [1] The major disadvantage of 3D crossbars currently is the high-leakage or sneak-path current. [2] Complex class of vanadium oxide spans a broad range of 20 phases. [3] Depending on the stoichiometry, crystal structure, and device structure it has demonstrated bipolar resistive switching (BRS) [4][5][6][7][8][9][10] as well as apolar threshold switching (TS). [11][12][13] Apolar TS property in the above papers is desirable as a selector element in crossbar arrays to reduce the sneak-path current (which disrupts stored data). Crystalline VO 2 (c-VO 2 ) as TS element shows significant OFF-current, [12,13] which defeats its primary purpose as a selector. For this reason, a few recent studies [10,[14][15][16] demonstrated TS based on amorphous vanadium oxide (a-VO x ). However, due to the amorphous nature of the film, devices based on same stoichiometry of vanadium oxide show multifunctional memory behavior, [17] which is not desirable for the practical application. This variability highlights that nanostructural investigations are needed to understand the origins of different memory behaviors, in particular the reasons for observing volatile and apolar TS in a-VO x films for its practical utilization as a selector element. Further, in-depth electrical characterization is required to ascertain the electrical conditions for the occurrence of volatile or non-volatile switching in the single device.Here, we present asymmetric cross-point device (Pt/Ti/a-VO x /Pt) with ≈100 nm a-VO x film as a functional switching layer which shows multifunctional behavior in a single device. We further introduce a fabrication procedure (Section S1, Supporting Information) to incorporate a-VO x in crossbar architecture, which has been found to dissolve in water. We choose amorphous films because crystalline films are porous due to grain boundaries and pin-holes, [11] which is unsuitable for stacked architectures. Through X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) we analyze the stoichiometry of as-deposited film which revealed the mixed-phased oxidation, including V 3+ , V 4+ , and V 5+ (corresponding to V 2 O 3 , VO 2 , and V 2 O 5 , respectively).