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Design of defect-chemical properties and device performance in memristive systems

Michael Lübben, Felix Cüppers, Johannes Mohr, Moritz von Witzleben, U. Breuer, Rainer Waser, Christian Neumann, Ilia Valov

2020Science Advances83 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Future development of the modern nanoelectronics and its flagships internet of things, artificial intelligence, and neuromorphic computing is largely associated with memristive elements, offering a spectrum of inevitable functionalities, atomic level scalability, and low-power operation. However, their development is limited by significant variability and still phenomenologically orientated materials' design strategy. Here, we highlight the vital importance of materials' purity, demonstrating that even parts-per-million foreign elements substantially change performance. Appropriate choice of chemistry and amount of doping element selectively enhances the desired functionality. Dopant/impurity-dependent structure and charge/potential distribution in the space-charge layers and cell capacitance determine the device kinetics and functions. The relation between chemical composition/purity and switching/neuromorphic performance is experimentally evidenced, providing directions for a rational design of future memristive devices.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceMaterials scienceNanotechnologyBiological systemBiologyAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research
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