Liquid electrolyte contacts for advanced characterization of resistive switching memories

Credit: Experimental

Memristors are nanosized electronic devices that can be used to fabricate next generation memories, and to build up electronic synapses for neuromorphic computing. A memristor consists on a metal-insulator-metal nanocell, in which electrical impulses are applied between the electrodes to modulate the resistivity of the insulator. In this way, a high and a low resistivity state can be intentionally and cyclically induced, which can be used to simulate the ones and zeros of the binary code. The resistivity changes are generated due to local atomic rearrangements produced by the electrical field applied, but understanding this phenomenon is very challenging because i) it takes place in very small areas, and ii) it happens at the insulating stack, which is buried in the top electrode.

The group lead by Prof. Paul C. McIntyre at Stanford University has recently developed a new methodology to observe in situ these local conductivity changes. The method consists on replacing the top electrode by a conductive liquid electrolyte, which can be polarized to stress the insulator. After the stress, the electrolyte can be rinsed and the surface of the insulator is scanned via conductive atomic force microscopy. The nanoscale studies have been carried by Prof. Mario Lanza’s group, and reveal the formation of local spots with diameters below 4 nm that are responsible for the conductivity change. By tuning the conductivity of the liquid electrolyte, this method even allows distinguishing the contribution of electrical field and thermal heat into the currents generated.

###

This work was recently presented in the first China RRAM International Workshop (see http://www.chinarram.org), which was held at Soochow University on June 12th-14th of 2017. This event, hosted by Prof. Mario Lanza, aggregated most world leaders in the field of memristors, including Prof. Philip Wong (Stanford University), Prof. Wei Lu (Michigan University) and Prof. Tony Kenyon (University College London), among many others. The workshop is expected to hold its second edition in 2019 and become a biannual meeting for the memristors community.

Media Contact

Joan Sintes
[email protected]
34-671-502-025

http://www.lanzalab.com

Original Source

http://www.chinarram.org http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.7b01460

How crispy is your bonbon?

CAMBRIDGE, MA — Since the 1600s, chocolatiers have been perfecting the art of the bonbon, passing down techniques for crafting a perfectly smooth, even...

Graphene detector reveals THz light’s polarization

Physicists have created a broadband detector of terahertz radiation based on graphene. The device has potential for applications in communication and next-generation information transmission...

Engineering: Reducing noise transmitted through an open window

A new device that can reduce the intensity of sound passing through open windows is presented in a proof-of-principle study in Scientific Reports. It...

Researchers characterize ‘mutational burden’ of human induced pluripotent stem cells

The therapeutic potential of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which are capable of becoming almost any type of cell in the human body,...

Nanotechnology makes it possible for mice to see in infrared

Mice with vision enhanced by nanotechnology were able to see infrared light as well as visible light, reports a study published February 28 in...

Featured research findings from Nutrition 2019

Conference press materials now availablePress materials are now available for Nutrition 2019, the flagship meeting of the American Society for Nutrition, to be held...

HKU chemists develop world’s first light-seeking synthetic Nanorobot

A team of researchers led by Dr Jinyao Tang of the Department of Chemistry, the University of Hong Kong, has developed the world's first...

SLU study: Mediterranean diet boosts endurance exercise within days

ST. LOUIS — Researchers at Saint Louis University have found that eating a Mediterranean diet can improve athletes’ endurance exercise performance after just four...

Combination of old and new yields novel power grid cybersecurity tool

An innovative R&D project led by Berkeley Lab researchers that combines cybersecurity, machine learning algorithms and commercially available power system sensor technology to better...