Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5124155
Title: An organic approach to low energy memory and brain inspired electronics
Authors: Sreetosh Goswami 
Sreebrata Goswami 
T. Venkatesan 
Keywords: Memristor
Raman spectroscopy
Memory device
Neuron model
Spin coating
Organic materials
Redox reactions
Issue Date: 21-Apr-2020
Publisher: AIP Publishing
Citation: Sreetosh Goswami, Sreebrata Goswami, T. Venkatesan (2020-04-21). An organic approach to low energy memory and brain inspired electronics. Applied Physics Reviews 7 (2). ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5124155
Abstract: Brain inspired electronics with organic memristors could offer a functionally promising and cost-effective platform for flexible, wearable, and personalized computing technologies. While there are different material approaches (viz. oxides, nitrides, 2D, organic) to realize memristors, organic materials are characteristically unique, as they could, in principle, offer spatially uniform switching, tunable molecular functionalities, and ultra-low switching energies approaching atto joules that are highly desirable but elusive with other material systems. However, despite a long-standing effort spanning almost 2 decades, the performance and mechanistic understanding in organic memristors are quite far from a translational stage and even a single suitable candidate is yet to emerge. Almost all the reported organic memristors lack reproducibility, endurance, stability, uniformity, scalability, and speed that are needed for an industrial application. In this review, we analyze the root cause of the prolonged failures of organic memory devices and discuss a new family of organic memristors, made of transition metal complexes of redox active organic ligands (RAL), that satisfy and go beyond the requirements specified in the 2015 ITRS roadmap for RRAM devices. These devices exhibit cyclability > 1012, retention of several months, on/off ratio > 103 , switching voltage approaching 100 mV, rise time less than 30 ns, and switching energy
Source Title: Applied Physics Reviews
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/188020
ISSN: 19319401
DOI: 10.1063/1.5124155
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