Tetrahedral amorphous carbon resistive memories with graphene-based electrodes

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Abstract

Resistive-switching memories are alternative to Si-based ones, which face scaling and high power consumption issues. Tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C) shows reversible, non-volatile resistive switching. Here we report polarity independent ta-C resistive memory devices with graphenebased electrodes. Our devices show ON/OFF resistance ratios ~4 × 105, ten times higher than with metal electrodes, with no increase in switching power, and low power density ~14 μW μm-2. We attribute this to a suppressed tunneling current due to the low density of states of graphene near the Dirac point, consistent with the current-voltage characteristics derived from a quantum point contact model. Our devices also have multiple resistive states. This allows storing more than one bit per cell. This can be exploited in a range of signal processing/computing-type operations, such as implementing logic, providing synaptic and neuron-like mimics, and performing analogue signal processing in non-von-Neumann architectures.

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Ott, A. K., Dou, C., Sassi, U., Goykhman, I., Yoon, D., Wu, J., … Ferrari, A. C. (2018). Tetrahedral amorphous carbon resistive memories with graphene-based electrodes. 2D Materials, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1088/2053-1583/aad64b

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