Silicon CMOS-based computing-in-memory encounters design and power challenges, especially in logic-in-memory scenarios requiring nonvolatility and reconfigurability. Here, we report a universal design for nonvolatile reconfigurable devices featuring a 2D/3D heterointegrated configuration. By leveraging the photo-controlled charge trapping/detrapping process and the partially top-gated energy band landscape, the van der Waals heterostacking achieves polarity storage and logic reconfigurable characteristics, respectively. Precise polarity tunability, logic nonvolatility, robustness against high temperature (at 85°C), and near-ideal subthreshold swing (80 mV dec−1) can be done. A comprehensive investigation of dynamic charge fluctuations provides a holistic understanding of the origins of nonvolatile reconfigurability (a trap level of 1013 cm−2 eV−1). Furthermore, we cascade such nonvolatile reconfigurable units into a monolithic circuit layer to demonstrate logic-in-memory computing possibilities, such as high-gain (65 at Vdd = 0.5 V) logic gates. This work provides an innovative 3D heterointegration prototype for future computing-in-memory hardware.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, M. P., Gao, C., Tsai, M. Y., Lin, C. Y., Yang, F. S., Sung, H. Y., … Lin, Y. F. (2023). Silicon-van der Waals heterointegration for CMOS-compatible logic-in-memory design. Science Advances, 9(49). https://doi.org/10.1126/SCIADV.ADK1597
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