| Literature DB >> 29782667 |
Yan Wang1,2, Ziyu Lv1, Qiufan Liao3, Haiquan Shan4, Jinrui Chen5, Ye Zhou5, Li Zhou1, Xiaoli Chen1, Vellaisamy A L Roy6, Zhanpeng Wang5, Zongxiang Xu4, Yu-Jia Zeng3, Su-Ting Han1.
Abstract
The in-depth understanding of ions' generation and movement inside all-inorganic perovskite quantum dots (CsPbBr3 QDs), which may lead to a paradigm to break through the conventional von Neumann bottleneck, is strictly limited. Here, it is shown that formation and annihilation of metal conductive filaments and Br- ion vacancy filaments driven by an external electric field and light irradiation can lead to pronounced resistive-switching effects. Verified by field-emission scanning electron microscopy as well as energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis, the resistive switching behavior of CsPbBr3 QD-based photonic resistive random-access memory (RRAM) is initiated by the electrochemical metallization and valance change. By coupling CsPbBr3 QD-based RRAM with a p-channel transistor, the novel application of an RRAM-gate field-effect transistor presenting analogous functions of flash memory is further demonstrated. These results may accelerate the technological deployment of all-inorganic perovskite QD-based photonic resistive memory for successful logic application.Entities:
Keywords: RRAM; ion vacancy; metal conductive filament; perovskite; quantum dots
Year: 2018 PMID: 29782667 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201800327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849