The Cu migration is controlled by using an optimized AlO interfacial layer, and effects on resistive switching performance, artificial synapse, and human saliva detection in an amorphous-oxygenated-carbon (a-CO )-based CBRAM platform have been investigated for the first time. The 4 nm-thick AlO layer in the Cu/AlO /a-CO /TiN O /TiN structure shows consecutive >2000 DC switching, tight distribution of SET/RESET voltages, a long program/erase (P/E) endurance of >10 cycles at a low operation current of 300 μA, and artificial synaptic characteristics under a small pulse width of 100 ns. After a P/E endurance of >10 cycles, the Cu migration is observed by both ex situ high-resolution transmission electron microscopy and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy mapping images. Furthermore, the optimized Cu/AlO /a-CO /TiN O /TiN CBRAM detects glucose with a low concentration of 1 pM, and real-time measurement of human saliva with a small sample volume of 1 μL is also detected repeatedly in vitro. This is owing to oxidation-reduction of Cu electrode, and the switching mechanism is explored. Therefore, this CBRAM device is beneficial for future artificial intelligence application.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7114759PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.0c00795DOI Listing

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