Shock waves in binary oxides memristors

Progress of silicon based technology is nearing its physical limit, as minimum feature size of components is reaching a mere 5 nm. The resistive switching behavior of transition metal oxides and the associated memristor device is emerging as a competitive technology for next generation electronics....

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Publicado: 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
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id paper:paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
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spelling paper:paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler2025-07-30T18:03:59Z Shock waves in binary oxides memristors Memristors Resistive Switching Shock Waves Bins Magnetoelectronics Memristors Transition metal compounds Transition metals Minimum feature sizes Model simulation Non-linear dynamics Resistive switching Resistive switching behaviors Silicon-based technology Transition-metal oxides Trial and error Shock waves Progress of silicon based technology is nearing its physical limit, as minimum feature size of components is reaching a mere 5 nm. The resistive switching behavior of transition metal oxides and the associated memristor device is emerging as a competitive technology for next generation electronics. Significant progress has already been made in the past decade and devices are beginning to hit the market; however, it has been mainly the result of empirical trial and error. Hence, gaining theoretical insight is of essence. In the present work we report a new connection between the resistive switching and shock wave formation, a classic topic of non-linear dynamics. We argue that the profile of oxygen ions that migrate during the commutation in insulating binary oxides may form a shock wave, which propagates through a poorly conductive region of the device. We validate the scenario by means of model simulations. © 2017 SPIE. 2017 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Memristors
Resistive Switching
Shock Waves
Bins
Magnetoelectronics
Memristors
Transition metal compounds
Transition metals
Minimum feature sizes
Model simulation
Non-linear dynamics
Resistive switching
Resistive switching behaviors
Silicon-based technology
Transition-metal oxides
Trial and error
Shock waves
spellingShingle Memristors
Resistive Switching
Shock Waves
Bins
Magnetoelectronics
Memristors
Transition metal compounds
Transition metals
Minimum feature sizes
Model simulation
Non-linear dynamics
Resistive switching
Resistive switching behaviors
Silicon-based technology
Transition-metal oxides
Trial and error
Shock waves
Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
topic_facet Memristors
Resistive Switching
Shock Waves
Bins
Magnetoelectronics
Memristors
Transition metal compounds
Transition metals
Minimum feature sizes
Model simulation
Non-linear dynamics
Resistive switching
Resistive switching behaviors
Silicon-based technology
Transition-metal oxides
Trial and error
Shock waves
description Progress of silicon based technology is nearing its physical limit, as minimum feature size of components is reaching a mere 5 nm. The resistive switching behavior of transition metal oxides and the associated memristor device is emerging as a competitive technology for next generation electronics. Significant progress has already been made in the past decade and devices are beginning to hit the market; however, it has been mainly the result of empirical trial and error. Hence, gaining theoretical insight is of essence. In the present work we report a new connection between the resistive switching and shock wave formation, a classic topic of non-linear dynamics. We argue that the profile of oxygen ions that migrate during the commutation in insulating binary oxides may form a shock wave, which propagates through a poorly conductive region of the device. We validate the scenario by means of model simulations. © 2017 SPIE.
title Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
title_short Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
title_full Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
title_fullStr Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
title_full_unstemmed Shock waves in binary oxides memristors
title_sort shock waves in binary oxides memristors
publishDate 2017
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0277786X_v10357_n_p_Tesler
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