| Literature DB >> 33533590 |
Botond Sánta1,2, Zoltán Balogh1,2, László Pósa1,3, Dávid Krisztián1, Tímea Nóra Török1,2, Dániel Molnár1,2, Csaba Sinkó1, Roland Hauert4, Miklós Csontos1,5, András Halbritter1,2.
Abstract
In this study, the possibilities of noise tailoring in filamentary resistive switching memory devices are investigated. To this end, the resistance and frequency scaling of the low-frequency 1/f-type noise properties are studied in representative mainstream material systems. It is shown that the overall noise floor is tailorable by the proper material choice, as demonstrated by the order-of-magnitude smaller noise levels in Ta2O5 and Nb2O5 transition-metal oxide memristors compared to Ag-based devices. Furthermore, the variation of the resistance states allows orders-of-magnitude tuning of the relative noise level in all of these material systems. This behavior is analyzed in the framework of a point-contact noise model highlighting the possibility for the disorder-induced suppression of the noise contribution arising from remote fluctuators. These findings promote the design of multipurpose resistive switching units, which can simultaneously serve as analog-tunable memory elements and tunable noise sources in probabilistic computing machines.Entities:
Keywords: atomic fluctuation; memristor; niobium pentoxide; noise; resistive switching memory; silver sulfide; tantalum pentoxide; two-level system
Year: 2021 PMID: 33533590 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c21156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229