2 results match your criteria: "Universités UPMC et Paris-Sud[Affiliation]"

Direct Evidence of Lithium Ion Migration in Resistive Switching of Lithium Cobalt Oxide Nanobatteries.

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June 2018

Laboratoire de Génie Electrique et Electronique de Paris, CNRS, CentraleSupélec, Universités UPMC et Paris-Sud, 11 rue Joliot-Curie, 91192, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

Lithium cobalt oxide nanobatteries offer exciting prospects in the field of nonvolatile memories and neuromorphic circuits. However, the precise underlying resistive switching (RS) mechanism remains a matter of debate in two-terminal cells. Herein, intriguing results, obtained by secondary ion mass spectroscopy (SIMS) 3D imaging, clearly demonstrate that the RS mechanism corresponds to lithium migration toward the outside of the Li CoO layer.

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Memristive and neuromorphic behavior in a Li(x)CoO2 nanobattery.

Sci Rep

January 2015

Laboratoire de Génie Électrique de Paris, CNRS-UMR 8507, Universités UPMC et Paris-Sud, Supélec, F-91192 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

The phenomenon of resistive switching (RS), which was initially linked to non-volatile resistive memory applications, has recently also been associated with the concept of memristors, whose adjustable multilevel resistance characteristics open up unforeseen perspectives in cognitive computing. Herein, we demonstrate that the resistance states of Li(x)CoO2 thin film-based metal-insulator-metal (MIM) solid-state cells can be tuned by sequential programming voltage pulses, and that these resistance states are dramatically dependent on the pulses input rate, hence emulating biological synapse plasticity. In addition, we identify the underlying electrochemical processes of RS in our MIM cells, which also reveal a nanobattery-like behavior, leading to the generation of electrical signals that bring an unprecedented new dimension to the connection between memristors and neuromorphic systems.

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