Spatially Distributed Ramp Reversal Memory in VO<sub>2</sub>

ORAL

Abstract

We use optical microscopy to image spatial maps of accumulated memory as a thin film of VO2 is repeatedly driven partway through its temperature-driven insulator-to-metal transition. By mapping for the first time the spatial structure of metal and insulator patches during a temperature ramp reversal sequence, the location and shape of accumulated memory was tracked after each hysteresis subloop, revealing the internal structure of the ramp reversal memory effect in this material. Our measurements demonstrate that new insulating regions appear through front propagation starting at insulator-metal boundaries. Surprisingly, our transition temperature maps reveal that memory is also stored deep inside the insulating and metallic clusters throughout the entire sample surface. We show that the non-volatile memory is globally reset by large temperature sweeps completed afterwards. We have developed a new model based on defect motion that accounts for the observed memory writing and subsequent erasing over the entire sample surface. By spatially mapping the location and character of non-volatile memory encoding in VO2, our results pave the way toward directly addressing local regions of VO2 in order to optimize neuromorphic memory elements.

*S.B., F.S., and E.W.C. acknowledge support from NSF Grant No. DMR-2006192 and the Research Corporation for Science Advancement Cottrell SEED Award. S.B. acknowledges support from a Bilsland Dissertation Fellowship. E.W.C. acknowledges support from a Fulbright Fellowship. This research was supported in part through computational resources provided by Research Computing at Purdue, West Lafayette, Indiana. The work at UCSD (PS, IKS) was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research under award number FA9550-20-1-0242. The work at ESPCI (M.A.B., L.A., and A.Z.) was supported by Cofund AI4theSciences hosted by PSL University, through the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant No. 945304.

Presenters

  • Alexandre Zimmers

    • ESPCI PSL-Sorbonne University

Authors

  • Alexandre Zimmers

    • ESPCI PSL-Sorbonne University
  • Sayan Basak

    • Purdue University
  • Yuxin Sun

    • Purdue University
  • Melissa Alzate Banguero

    • ESPCI Paris
  • Pavel Salev

    • University of Denver
    • Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Denver
    • University of California, San Diego - University of Denver
  • IVAN K SCHULLER

    • University of California, San Diego
    • Department of Physics, University of California San Diego
    • Department of Physics, University of California, San Diego
  • Lionel Aigouy

    • ESPCI PSL-Sorbonne University
    • ESPCI PSL-CNRS
    • ESPCI Paris
    • EPCI PSL-CNRS
  • Erica W Carlson

    • Purdue University