4.8 Article

Charge disproportionate molecular redox for discrete memristive and memcapacitive switching

Journal

NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 380-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41565-020-0653-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SERB, India [SR/S2/JCB-09/2011, EMR/2014/000520]
  2. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [15/CDA/3491, 12/RC/2275_P2]
  3. Ministry of Education (MOE) [MOE2015-T2-2-134]
  4. NGS
  5. [NRF-CRP15-2015-01]

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Electronic symmetry breaking by charge disproportionation results in multifaceted changes in the electronic, magnetic and optical properties of a material, triggering ferroelectricity, metal/insulator transition and colossal magnetoresistance. Yet, charge disproportionation lacks technological relevance because it occurs only under specific physical conditions of high or low temperature or high pressure. Here we demonstrate a voltage-triggered charge disproportionation in thin molecular films of a metal-organic complex occurring in ambient conditions. This provides a technologically relevant molecular route for simultaneous realization of a ternary memristor and a binary memcapacitor, scalable down to a device area of 60 nm(2). Supported by mathematical modelling, our results establish that multiple memristive states can be functionally non-volatile, yet discrete-a combination perceived as theoretically prohibited. Our device could be used as a binary or ternary memristor, a binary memcapacitor or both concomitantly, and unlike the existing 'continuous state' memristors, its discrete states are optimal for high-density, ultra-low-energy digital computing. Charge disproportionation in thin molecular films of a metal-organic complex enables the realization of a ternary memristor and binary memcapacitor.

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