posted on 2017-12-13, 00:00authored byRuijing Ge, Xiaohan Wu, Myungsoo Kim, Jianping Shi, Sushant Sonde, Li Tao, Yanfeng Zhang, Jack C. Lee, Deji Akinwande
Recently,
two-dimensional (2D) atomic sheets have inspired new
ideas in nanoscience including topologically protected charge transport,, spatially separated excitons, and strongly
anisotropic heat transport. Here, we report
the intriguing observation of stable nonvolatile resistance switching
(NVRS) in single-layer atomic sheets sandwiched between metal electrodes.
NVRS is observed in the prototypical semiconducting (MX2, M = Mo, W; and X = S, Se) transitional metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), which alludes to the universality of this phenomenon
in TMD monolayers and offers forming-free switching. This observation
of NVRS phenomenon, widely attributed to ionic diffusion, filament,
and interfacial redox in bulk oxides and electrolytes,− inspires new studies on defects, ion transport, and energetics at
the sharp interfaces between atomically thin sheets and conducting
electrodes. Our findings overturn the contemporary thinking that nonvolatile
switching is not scalable to subnanometre owing to leakage currents. Emerging device concepts in nonvolatile flexible
memory fabrics, and brain-inspired (neuromorphic) computing could
benefit substantially from the wide 2D materials design space. A new
major application, zero-static power radio frequency (RF) switching,
is demonstrated with a monolayer switch operating to 50 GHz.