Abstract
Concepts of non-volatile memory to replace conventional flash memory have suffered from low material reliability and high off-state current, and the use of a thick, rigid blocking oxide layer in flash memory further restricts vertical scale-up. Here, we report a two-terminal floating gate memory, tunnelling random access memory fabricated by a monolayer MoS2/h-BN/monolayer graphene vertical stack. Our device uses a two-terminal electrode for current flow in the MoS2 channel and simultaneously for charging and discharging the graphene floating gate through the h-BN tunnelling barrier. By effective charge tunnelling through crystalline h-BN layer and storing charges in graphene layer, our memory device demonstrates an ultimately low off-state current of 10-14 A, leading to ultrahigh on/off ratio over 109, about ∼103 times higher than other two-terminal memories. Furthermore, the absence of thick, rigid blocking oxides enables high stretchability (>19%) which is useful for soft electronics.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Vu, Q. A., Shin, Y. S., Kim, Y. R., Nguyen, V. L., Kang, W. T., Kim, H., … Yu, W. J. (2016). Two-terminal floating-gate memory with van der Waals heterostructures for ultrahigh on/off ratio. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12725
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