| Literature DB >> 24225345 |
Ahmad Umair, Tehseen Z Raza, Hassan Raza1.
Abstract
We report the use of bilayer graphene as an atomically smooth contact for nanoscale devices. A two-terminal bucky-ball (C60) based molecular memory is fabricated with bilayer graphene as a contact on the polycrystalline nickel electrode. Graphene provides an atomically smooth covering over an otherwise rough metal surface. The use of graphene additionally prohibits the electromigration of nickel into the C60 layer. The devices exhibit a low-resistance state in the first sweep cycle and irreversibly switch to a high-resistance state at 0.8 to 1.2 V bias. In the subsequent cycles, the devices retain the high-resistance state, thus making it write-once read-many memory.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24225345 PMCID: PMC3835392 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-8-476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Device schematics and characterization. (a) Molecular memory with atomically smooth bilayer graphene sandwiched between 300 nm Ni and 100 nm C60 films. (b) Control device without the bilayer graphene. (c) Raman spectrum of evaporated C60 film on the bilayer graphene is shown as well.
Figure 2Transport characteristics in the first and second sweep cycles. (a) During the first sweep cycle, the voltage is swept in the forward direction until the device switches to high-resistance state. During the reverse sweep, the device remains in the high-resistance and shows hysteresis. (b) The device remains in the high-resistance state during the second sweep cycle and no hysteresis or switching is observed.
Figure 3Retention characteristics. The memory device shows a stable low-resistance state with for 103 s (blue line). After switching to the high-resistance state by applying a 1.2-V write pulse of 10 ms duration, stable current is observed again. The dashed lines are the interpolation to 104 s (red line).