| Literature DB >> 31610648 |
Yang Li1,2,3, Xiaolin Zhu1, Yujia Li1, Mayue Zhang1, Chunlan Ma1, Hua Li2, Jianmei Lu2, Qichun Zhang3.
Abstract
Although organic small-molecule-based memory devices (OSMDs) have been demonstrated to show great potential for the application in next-generation data-storage technology, progress toward their further development has been hugely hindered by the ambiguity of their electrical switching mechanism. Thus, purposely fabricating OSMDs with a definite switching behavior is very urgent. Here, we reported a redox-gated nonvolatile rewritable memory device using an organometallic small molecule as an active material. By introducing the redox-active ferrocene into an organic skeleton, the target small molecule exhibits reliable and robust FLASH-type bistable electrical characteristics with a clear redox-controlled switching mechanism, which leads to low operational voltages, good endurance, and long retention. Our study offers a proof-of-concept strategy to design controllable OSMDs with excellent performances.Entities:
Keywords: data storage; electrical switching; nonvolatile memory; organometallic material; redox
Year: 2019 PMID: 31610648 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.9b13401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229