Low-voltage Graphene/LiNbO<sub>3 </sub>memristors
ORAL
Abstract
Recent observations of domain wall conductivity in the LiNbO3 thin films may facilitate the development of electrically-tunable resistive switching devices employing conductive domain walls as functional elements. In LiNbO3 capacitors, several orders of magnitude modulation of resistance can be achieved by systematically changing the density of injected domain walls using voltage pulse amplitude above the coercive bias. However, a deleterious characteristic of this approach is a high-energy cost of polarization reversal due to high leakage current. Here, we demonstrate a new approach for tuning the device resistance by modulating the conductivity of domain walls rather than changing the domain configuration. Using the LiNbO3 thin film capacitors with graphene top electrodes, we show that once the device is set to a specific poly-domain state, its resistance can be continuously tuned by application of sub-coercive voltage. The tuning mechanism is based on reversible transition between the conducting and insulating states of the domain walls due to the electrically-induced wall bending near the sample surface. The developed approach provides an energy-efficient way to realize resistive functionality without the need of the domain structure modification by high voltage pulses.
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Presenters
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Pradeep Chaudhary
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Authors
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Pradeep Chaudhary
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Haidong Lu
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Alexey Lipatov
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Zahra Ahmadi
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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James PV McConville
Center for Nanostructured media, Queen's University Belfast
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Andrei Sokolov
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Jeffrey Shield
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Alexander Sinitskii
University of Nebraska - Lincoln
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Marty Gregg
Center for Nanostructured media, Queen's University Belfast
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Alexei Gruverman
University of Nebraska - Lincoln