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Resistive switching on individual VO nanoparticles encapsulated in fluorinated graphene films. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Memristors are promising components for neuromorphic electronics due to the unique properties of transition metal oxides, particularly vanadium oxide (VO).
  • Recent research focused on 2 to 10 nm VO nanoparticles encapsulated in fluorinated graphene (FG), demonstrating reliable bipolar resistive switching across 10 cycles with a notable ON/OFF current ratio.
  • The study highlights that the thickness of FG shells influences the switching voltage (2-4 V), while the encapsulation increases stability and prevents water loss, contributing to the development of bipolar nanoswitches.

Article Abstract

Memristors currently attract much attention as basic building blocks for future neuromorphic electronics. Due to their unusual electronic, optical, magnetic, electrochemical, and structural properties, transition metal oxides offer much potential in the development of memristors. Recent trends in the design and fabrication of electronic devices have led to miniaturization of their working elements, with nanometer-sized structures enjoying increasing demand. In the present study, we investigated resistive switching on individual vanadium oxide (VO) crystal-hydrate nanoparticles, 2 to 10 nm in size, encapsulated in fluorinated graphene (FG). Measurements using a conductive atomic force microscope (c-AFM) probe showed that the core-shell VO/FG nanoparticles make it possible to achieve bipolar resistive switching, reproducible during 10 switching cycles, with the ON/OFF current ratio reaching 10-10. The switching voltage of the structures depends on the thickness of the FG shells of the composite particles and equals ∼2-4 V. It is shown that the encapsulation of VO particles in fluorinated graphene ensures a high stability of the resistive switching effect and, simultaneously, prevents the escape of water from the crystalline vanadium oxide hydrates. A qualitative model is proposed to describe the bipolar resistive switching effect in examined structures. Results reported in the present article will prove useful in creating bipolar nanoswitches.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1cp02930dDOI Listing

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